'NAFTA on steroids' - Wayne State University Digital Collections

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JUNE 7-13, 1998 THE DETROIT VOL. 3 NO. 30 75 CENTS CONTINUING THE STRUGGLE FOR JUSTICE AND CONTRACTS ©TDSJ INSIDE INDEX Classifieds Page 26 Crossword Page 27 Entertainment Page 11 Movie Guide Page 12 Horoscope Page 24 Editorials Page 8 Susan Watson Page 3 Truckers win huge victory By Alan Forsyth Journal Staff Writer D rivers for five Detroit- area beer distributors have won a decision that could mean tens of mil lions of dollars in back pay to about 400 truck drivers who are mem bers of Teamsters Local 1038. Union lawyer Sam McKnight, who represented Local 1038, says the back pay and interest could exceed $40 million by his “low-ball estimate.” An eventual award could be one of largest in the 63-year history of the National Labor Relations Board, he said. On Tuesday the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati ruled that the five dis tributors had “fraudulently con cealed an illegal bargaining pact” in their 1990 and 1991 negotia tions with Local 1038. The compa nies originally had agreed to bar gain separately, McKnight said, but then seemed to be bargaining together The court upheld an order by the National Labor Relations Board which said the distributors must See BEER, Page 6 # Shared loss Barbara Case, mother of slain Children’s Protective Services worker Lisa Putman, is comforted by Belinda Smith after a memorial service last week. Smith is a mem ber of UAW Local 6000, which rep resents state workers. Hundreds attend ed the service at the Sterling Heights FIA office where Putman worked. See essay on Page 5. Journal photo by GEORGE WALDMAN ‘NAFTA on steroids’ Trade treaty would By Mark K. Anderson Alternet News Service H ere’s a quick test: global trade, economic neoliberal ism, Multilateral Agree ment on Investment. Have you lost interest yet? There are people who hope you have, so that you won’t stick around to hear such terms as “dismantling democracy,” “unwriting the Constitution” and “corporate feudalism.” The latter phrases are a loud bunch, more sensational than infor mative. All the same, they’re relevant to any discussion about MAI, or the Multilateral Agreement on Invest ment. MAI is an as-yet-unratified interna tional trade treaty most Americans haven’t heard of. For three years, it has been written and rewritten behind closed doors, almost exclusive ly by representatives from transna tional corporations and unelected trade bureaucrats. What they’ve created is an agree ment that would bind its 29 signatory countries (the richest nations in the world) to terms that give multination al corporations unprecedented power in shaping not only global trade but also environmental, human rights and labor regulations. Ostensibly, MAI’s goal is to foster international commerce via deregula tion, but critics say it would gut pow ers of democratically elected govern ments for the sake of private profi teers. The treaty would need to be ratified by its host governments. In the United States, that means a signa ture by the president — who is strongly in favor of MAI — and a two- thirds majority in the Senate. When See MAI, Page 6

Transcript of 'NAFTA on steroids' - Wayne State University Digital Collections

JUNE 7-13, 1998 THE DETROIT VOL. 3 NO. 30 75 CENTS

C O N T I N U I N G T H E S T R U G G L E F O R J U S T I C E A N D C O N T R A C T S©TDSJ

INSIDEI N D E XClassifieds Page 26Crossword Page 27Entertainment Page 11Movie Guide Page 12Horoscope Page 24Editorials Page 8Susan Watson Page 3

Truckers win huge victoryBy A lan F orsythJournal S ta ff Writer

Drivers for five D etroit- a rea beer d istribu to rs have won a decision th a t could m ean tens of m il­lions of dollars in back pay to about

400 truck drivers who are mem­bers of Teamsters Local 1038.

Union lawyer Sam McKnight, who represented Local 1038, says the back pay and interest could exceed $40 million by his “low-ball estim ate.”

An eventual award could be one of largest in the 63-year history of the N ational Labor Relations Board, he said.

On Tuesday the U.S. S ixth C ircuit C ourt of Appeals in Cincinnati ruled th a t the five dis­tributors had “fraudulently con­cealed an illegal bargaining pact” in their 1990 and 1991 negotia­tions with Local 1038. The compa­nies originally had agreed to ba r­gain separately, M cKnight said, but then seemed to be bargaining together

The court upheld an order by the National Labor Relations Board which said the distributors m ust

See BEER, Page 6

# SharedlossBarbara Case, mother of slain Children’s Protective Services worker Lisa Putman, is comforted by Belinda Smith after a memorial service last week. Smith is a mem­ber of UAW Local 6000, which rep­resents state workers.Hundreds attend­ed the service at the Sterling Heights FIA office where Putman worked. See essay on Page 5.

Journal photo by GEORGE WALDMAN

‘NAFTA on steroids’Trade treaty would

By Mark K. A ndersonAlternet N ews Service

Here’s a quick test: global trade, economic neoliberal­ism, M ultilateral Agree­m ent on Investment.

Have you lost interest yet? There are people who hope you have, so that you won’t stick around to hear such term s as “dismantling democracy,” “unw riting the Constitution” and “corporate feudalism.”

The la tte r phrases are a loud bunch, more sensational than infor­mative. All the same, they’re relevant to any discussion about MAI, or the

M ultilateral Agreement on Invest­ment.

MAI is an as-yet-unratified in terna­tional trade treaty most Americans haven’t heard of. For three years, it has been w ritten and rew ritten behind closed doors, almost exclusive­ly by representatives from transna­tional corporations and unelected trade bureaucrats.

W hat they’ve created is an agree­m ent tha t would bind its 29 signatory countries (the richest nations in the world) to term s th a t give m ultination­al corporations unprecedented power in shaping not only global trade but

also environm ental, hum an rights and labor regulations.

Ostensibly, MAI’s goal is to foster international commerce via deregula­tion, but critics say it would gut pow­ers of democratically elected govern­m ents for the sake of private profi­teers.

The treaty would need to be ratified by its host governm ents. In the United States, th a t means a signa­tu re by the p resident — who is strongly in favor of MAI — and a two- thirds majority in the Senate. When

See MAI, Page 6

PAGE 10 THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL JUNE 7, 1998

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Word spread on MAIMAI, From Page 1

the treaty finally is presented to the public, perhaps in October, the Senate will most likely be the key American battleground.

The language surrounding MAI can be complex and even misleading, but consumer advocate Ralph Nader has come closest to capturing its essence: “NAFTA on steroids.”

NAFTA, the three-country agree­m ent tha t Ross Perot made famous with his “giant sucking sound,” is beginning to work its talons into American, Mexican and Canadian political and economic life. Among the effects of the N orth American Free Trade Agreement th a t are most relevant for discussion of the MAI is a provision th a t allows corporations to sue any of the three signatory governm ents for real or projected prof­it losses resulting from regulation.

Last year Canada out­lawed a gasoline additive m anufactured by the U.S.-based Ethyl Corp. because it may be poi­sonous to hum ans and the environment. Armed by NAFTA, Ethyl sued the C anadian govern­m ent for $250 million. P art of its argum ent is th a t merely debating the safety of Ethyl’s product constituted an “expropriation” of the company’s profits.

But if you think NAFTA’s bad, ju st wait till its pumped-up big brother comes to town. As Friends of the E arth President Brent Blackwelder put it, “The MAI would give corpora­tions unprecedented power to directly challenge governments’ environmen­tal, health, labor and other safe­guards. The MAI would be a dagger through the heart of democracy.”

Since 1995, the home of MAI has been in the headquarters of the invi­tation-only Organization for Eco­nomic Cooperation and Development in Paris. Member countries of the OECD are home to 487 of the Fortune 500 and 92 percent of the investment capital on the planet.

Until last year, only a select few people and organizations around the world knew MAI existed. It took a leaked version of the its text a year ago to draw public scrutiny. Public Citizen, which first publicly distribut­ed a draft of MAI, is a t the forefront of activism to defeat the treaty. It has posted an electronic version a t www.citizen.org.

According to MAI, all treaty signers would be automatically given “most favored nation” status when trading with one another — regardless of either country’s hum an rights, envi­ronm ental or labor practices.

For more info■ Friends of the Earth : 202-783-7400; www.foe.org■ Public Citizen: 202-546-4996; www.citizen.org■ Pream ble C enter for Public Policy: 202-265-3263; e-mail:preamble@rtk. net■ Sierra Club: 202-547-1141; www. sierraclub. org■ In ternational Forum on Globalization: 415-771-3394; www.ifg.org

Regulations th a t stand in the way of investm ent in any MAI signatory country would be prohibited.

If MAI had been around in the 1980s, Public Citizen says, the world­wide sanctions th a t eventually brought down South Africa’s apartheid regime would have been prohibited. “Countries will no longer be able to lim it the m igration of capi­tal,” said David Morris, vice-presi­dent of the Institu te for Local Self- Reliance. “A corporation such as Nike will be able to sue a Vietnamese city to overturn an ordinance th a t

requires it to buy part of its supplies locally, but Nike’s workers will be unable to sue the company if it overworks or underpays them .”

MAI would shield corporations from all “strife” as well as “revo­lution, states of emer­gency or any other sim­ilar events.” So protests and boycotts would be grounds for a corpora­tion to dem and com­pensation from the country where such “strife” occurred.

Moreover, it would ban “perform ance requ irem ents,” m ean­ing governments could not set standards

regarding local hiring, local reinvest­m ent, environm ental practices, employment levels, joint ventures or location of headquarters.

For instance, the MAI could be used to overturn the Community Reinvest-ment Act which encourages banks to invest in im poverished areas around the United States.

With so m any of its provisions ben­efiting corporate in terests a t the expense of governments and citizens, MAI will be a tough sell when it’s unveiled for public consideration. C hantell Taylor, Public C itizen’s Global Trade Watch coordinator, said when people understand it, “this thing kills itself.”

That may be the reason MAI has been a stealth treaty so long. “We’ve been putting on conferences all over the country, trying to get local work­ing groups on this issue and balanced debates — two pro- and two con-MAI speakers,” Taylor said. “Of course, we couldn’t find any proponents.”

Because U.S. labor unions and citi­zens groups were able last year to defeat fast-track, Taylor is optimistic about the anti-MAI movement.

But the treaty has some powerful and well-funded proponents — and plenty of opportunities to sneak through, even w ith increased public awareness. As Noam Chomsky wrote in a MAI-related article in Z m aga­zine last year:

“The rich and powerful rarely sub­m it to outside authority.”

JUNE 7, 1998__________________ PAGE 11

BRAVO!Michigan Opera Theatre has

a masterpiece in ’

the TV age to taskmovie review

*The Truman Show”o see it now

“The Truman Show” is a serio­comic look a t the ultim ate “what if?” question of the television age. It’s also a wonderful poke a t popu­lar culture tha t gives Carrey ample m aterial to downplay his manic side and show a serious, dramatic bent tha t many doubted he had.

“The Truman Show” balances the

surrealism of Trum an’s fake world with the present-day reality of what is labeled entertainm ent by intercutting his life with various viewers’ reactions. Thanks to direc­tor Peter Weir, the film always keeps a light sense of humor. And ju st like the fictitious audience in the film, we are glued to our seats awaiting the outcome of Trum an’s predicament.

Weir has an eye for seeing the most erratic comedic actors (Robin Williams, Carrey) as a source of untapped dram atic potential. In

See TRUMAN, Page 23

‘The Truman Show’ takes

MARK MANCINELLI/Special to the Journal

Marquita Lister and Jeffrey LaVar play Bess and Crown.

By M ichelle BanksSpecial to the Journal

To Truman Burbank (Jim Carrey), life is an endless bore. And he’s right. He’s a low-level insurance salesman stuck in a loveless m ar­

riage, and his life has become less of a routine than a drill.

But unbeknownst to Truman, his m undane life has been tele­vised, and what he sees as bor­ing, millions of viewers around the world think is captivating escapism; they watch his every move fervently.

By Joh n G uinnJournal M usic Critic

ichigan Opera Theatre’s splendid production of George Gershwin’s “Porgy and Bess,” which continues a t the Detroit

Opera House through June 21, provides conclu­sive answers to several im portant questions.

For one thing, it settles the argum ent about w hether Gershwin’s m usi­cal depiction of the joys and sorrows of the resi­dents of Catfish Row can be called an opera. The production m akes clear th a t “Porgy” is not only an opera, it’s the finest opera composed by an American.

For another, it proves th a t MOT deserves to shed the adjective “region­al” as a qualification of its sta tus as an opera compa­ny. The confidence and polish evident in this pro­duction confirm the com­pany’s position as an orga­nization of national impor­tance.

MARK MANCINELLI/Special to the Journal

Gordon Hawkins’ rich baritone voice fills the role of Porgy with strength, determ ination and grace.

This is the fourth time David DiChiera’s company has mounted “Porgy.” And while the earlier productions (in 1975, 1982 and 1987) were satisfying in many ways, none exposed the essence of Gershwin’s operatic m aster­piece as intensely as this one.

Four roles — Porgy, Bess, Crown and Serena — are double-cast. I saw both casts (at successive performances on May 30 and 31) and can state unequivocally tha t it does not m atter which cast you witness.

Alvy Powell’s baritone may be slightly richer than Gordon Hawkins’, but both filled Porgy’s role with strength, determination and grace. M arquita Lister (who sang the title role in Verdi’s “Aida” for MOT last fall) and M arilyn Moore-Brown brought supple sopranos and deeply etched charac­terizations to Porgy’s Bess.

Both Angela Simpson and Angela Brown soared into the stratosphere a t the end of “My Man’s Gone Now” with electrifying success

See PORGY, Page 25

Jim Carey, right, is Truman Burbank and Noah Emmerich plays Marlon in “The Truman Show.”

PAGE 12__________________________________________THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL____________________________________ JUNE 7, 1998

...... mmmmrn

> 7. ' -• • ••■.' ' -•

Call theaters for show times,Wayne CountyAllen Park (MJR)

A llen R oad at S o u th fie ld Rd.(313) 381-1125

Object of My Affection * Black Dog * Wild Things * S p e c ie s II * B arney ’s G rea t Adventure * W edding Singer * Mercury Rising

Beacon East (Showcase)

V ernier (E ight M ile) a t B eaconsfield (313) 882-7500

I Got the Hook Up * Almost H eroes * A Perfect Murder

Bel-Air (AMC)Eight M ile Rd., eas t of Van D yke

(313) 366-0800 The Truman Show * A Perfect Murder * I Got the Hook Up * Almost H eroes * Q uest for C am elot * Godzilla * Bullworth * D eep Impact * Woo * He Got G am e

Canton (General Cinema)Ford Rd. 1 m ile w e st of 1-275

(313) 981-1900 The Truman Show * A Perfect Murder * Godzilla * The H orse W hisperer * Deep Impact

Detroit Film TheatreD etro it In s titu te of A rts, 5200 W oodw ard

(313) 833-2323 C losed for the sum m er

Detroit Science CenterW arren, eas t of W oodw ard , D e tro it

(313) 577-8400 S harks * Tropical R ainforest * Special Effects * S uper Speedw ay: Racing With the Andrettis * Destiny in S p ace

Eastland Mall 2 (AMC)V ernier (E ight M ile) a t B eaconsfield

(313) 882-2678 The Truman Show * Godzilla

Eastland Mall 5 (AMC)V ernier (E ight M ile) a t B eaconsfield

(313) 521-2811 Hope Floats * H orse W hisperer * Bullworth* He Got G am e * D eep Impact

Fairlane (U.A.)Fairlane Tow n C enter, D earborn

(313) 438-0929 The Trum an Show * H ope F loats * Bullworth * D eep Impact * Titanic * Sliding Doors * Paulie * F ear and Loathing in Las Vegas

Ford-Tel (MJR)Ford Rd. at Telegraph Rd., D earbo rn

(313) 561-7200 O bject of My Affection * T he W edding Singer * Mercury Rising * Scream 2 * B arney’s G reat Adventure

Laurel Park (AMC)Six M ile Rd., bet. N ew burgh and 1-275

(313) 462-6200 The Truman Show * A Perfect Murder * Hope F loats * Almost H eroes * H orse W hisperer * Q uest for C am elot * Godzilla * Fear and Loathing in Las V egas * Bullworth* D eep Impact

Livonia Mall (MJR)M id d le B elt Rd. at Seven M ile Rd.

(248) 476-8800 Black Dog * O bject of My Affection W edding S in g er * B arney ’s G reat Adventure

Metro NorwestG rand R iver a t S o u th fie ld Freew ay

(313) 838-1030 I Got the Hook Up * Godzilla

PennP enn im an a t M ain , P lym outh

(313) 453-0870 Object of My Affection

Quo Vadis (Showcase)W ayne Rd. a t W arren Ave., W estland

(313) 425-7700 I Got the Hook Up * Godzilla * Bullworth * D eep Impact * Q uest for Cam elot * Titanic

Renaissance CenterTow er 200, Level 2 of R enaissance Cntr.

(313) 259-2370 I Got the Hook Up * Godzilla * Deep Impact* He Got G am e

Showcase DearbornM ichigan Ave. w est o f Telegraph Rd.

(313) 561-3449 A Perfect M urder * Almost H eroes * I Got the Hook Up * Godzilla * Q uest for Cam elot* H orse W hisperer * Woo

Showcase WestlandW ayne Rd. a b lock sou th of W arren Rd.

(313) 729-1060 The Truman Show * A Perfect Murder * Almost H eroes * Hope Floats * F ear and Loathing in Las V egas * Horse W hisperer

Southland (AMC)E ureka Rd., bet. 1-75 and Telegraph Rd.

(313) 287-2101 I Got the Hook Up * Horse W hisperer * Q uest for C am elot * Object of My Affection

Star Lincoln ParkS ou th fie ld Rd. at Dix Rd.,

(313) 382-9240 The Truman Show * Perfect M urder * I Got the Hook Up * Godzilla * Bullworth * The Horse W hisperer * D eep Impact

Star Taylor22265 Eureka Road

(313) 287-2200 The Truman Show * A Perfect Murder * Hope Floats * Almost H eroes * Godzilla * Bullworth * F ear and Loathing in Las Vegas* D eep Impact

State Wayne35310 M ich igan Ave. w est of W ayne

(313) 326-4600 Black Dog 2 * W edding Singer * Major League 3 * Object of My Affection

Terrace (Cinemark)P lym outh Rd. w est of M idd le Belt Rd.

(313) 261-3330 W edding Singer * Object of My Affection * Ride ’ Black Dog

Wonderland (AMC)P lym outh Rd. a t M idd le Belt Rd.

(313) 261-8100 I Got the Hook Up * Hope Floats * Almost H eroes * Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas * Woo * He Got G am e * Titanic

Oakland CountyAbbey (AMC)

14 M ile Rd. east of 1-75 (248) 588-0881

A Perfect M urder * Hope Floats * Almost H eroes * Fear and Loathing in Las V egas * Les M iserables * City of Angels * Good Will Hunting

Americana West (AMC)O rchard Lake Road, sou th o f 15 M ile

(248) 855-4200 A Perfect Murder * Almost H eroes * Hope Floats * Q uest for Cam elot * Bullworth * Deep Impact * City of Angels * Fear and Loathing in Las V egas

Birmingham Theatre211 S. W oodw ard, B irm ingham

(248) 644-3456 The Truman Show * A Perfect Murder * Hope Floats * Godzilla * Bullworth * The Horse W hisperer * Deep Impact

Commerce Township (UA)14 M ile R oad W est of H aggerty Road

C om m erce Tow nship (248) 960-7459

The Truman Show * A Perfect Murder * Hope Floats * Almost H eroes * Godzilla * Bullworth * Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas* Horse W hisperer * Q uest for Cam elot * Deep Impact * The Spanish Prisoner

Farmington CivicG rand River at Farm ington Rd.,

Farm ington (248) 474-1951

The Odd Couple II * Object of My Affection

Hampton (AMC)R ochester Rd., a m ile north of M-59

(248) 852-5322 S pec ies II * W edding S inger * Primary Colors * Barney’s Great Adventure

Keego TwinO rchard Lake Rd. a t Cass Lake Rd.

(248) 682-1900 Wild Things * Wedding Singer

Main Art (Landmark)M ain at 11 M ile Road, Royal O ak

(248) 542-0180 The Last Days of Disco * The Spanish Prisoner * Wilde

Maple Art (Landmark)M aple Rd., w est of Telegraph Rd.

(248) 855-9090 Horse W hisperer * Artemisia * A Price Above Rubies

Novi Town Center(G eneral C inem a)

Novi Rd., south of 1-96 (248) 344-0077

Perfect Murder * Hope Floats * Almost H eroes * Fear and Loathing in Las V egas * Horse W hisperer * Q uest for Cam elot * City of Angels

Oakland Mall (U.A.)14 M ile Rd. betw een 1-75 and John R

(248) 988-0706 I Got the Hook Up * Deep Impact * Object of My Affection * Sliding Doors

OxfordL apeer Rd., dow ntow n O xford

(248) 628-7100 Godzilla * Truman Show * Horse W hisperer

Showcase Auburn H illsO pdyke bet. U niversity an d Lapeer

(248) 373-2660 A Perfect Murder * The Truman Show * Almost H eroes * Hope Floats * I Got the Hook Up * Godzilla * Bullworth * Fear and Loathing in Las V egas * Q uest for Cam elot* Horse W hisperer * Deep Impact * Titanic

Showcase Pontiac (1-5)Telegraph Rd at Square Lake Rd.

(248) 332-0241 The Truman Show * Hope Floats 'Godzilla

Showcase Pontiac (6-12)Telegraph Rd. a t Square Lake Rd.

(248) 334-6777 A Perfect Murder * Almost H eroes * I Got the Hook Up * Bullworth * Deep Impact * Horse W hisperer * Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas

Southfield City (AMC)G reen fie ld Rd. at N ine M ile Rd.

(248) 559-2730 The Truman Show * A Perfect Murder * I Got the Hook Up * Almost H eroes * Hope Floats * Q uest for Cam elot * Godzilla * Bullworth * D eep Impact * Woo * He Got G am e * Players Club

Star John RJohn R, so. of 14 M ile Rd., M ad ison H ts.

(248) 585-2070 v The Truman Show * Godzilla * Bullworth * Q uest for Cam elot * Horse W hisperer * Titanic

Star Rochester H ills200 Barclay Circle, Rochester Rd. n. of M59

(248) 853-2260 The Truman Show * A Perfect Murder * Hope Floats * Godzilla * Bullworth * D eep Impact ’ The Horse W hisperer

Star Southfield12 M ile Rd. w est of Telegraph

(248) 372-2222 The Truman Show * A Perfect M urder ’ Hope Floats * Almost H eroes ’ Godzilla * Bullworth * Fear and Loathing in Las V egas* Q uest for C am elot * The Horse W hisperer* D eep Impact

Star Winchester1136 S outh R ochester Rd.

(248) 656-1160 Almost H eroes * Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas * Q uest for C am elot * Paulie * The Spanish Prisoner * Titanic * Les M iserables* City of Angels

Towne (AMC)G reenfie ld , ju s t north of 10 1/2 M ile

(248) 968-5174 Primary Colors * Wild T hings * U.S. M arshalls * Barney’s G reat Adventure * Wedding Singer

Twelve Oaks (U.A.)In s ide Tw elve O aks M all, N ovi

(248) 349-4311 The Truman Show * Godzilla * Bullworth * Deep Impact

Waterford (MJR)M-59 at W illiam s Lake Road

(248) 666-7900 The Truman Show * A Perfect Murder * Almost H eroes * Hope Floats * Godzilla * Bullworth * Fear and Loathing in Las V egas* Horse W hisperer * Q uest for Cam elot * Deep Impact * Paulie * City of Angels

West River (U.A.)G rand River, w est o f M id d leb e lt Road

(248) 476-8844 The Truman Show * A Perfect M urder * I Got the Hook Up * Almost H eroes * Hope Floats * Godzilla * Bullworth * Q uest for Cam elot * Horse W hisperer * D eep Impact

Macomb CountyChesterfield Crossing (MJR)

23 M ile Rd. a t G ratio t, C heste rfie ld (810) 598-2500

The Truman Show * A Perfect M urder * Almost H eroes * Hope Floats * Godzilla * Bullworth * Fear and Loathing in Las V egas* Q uest for C am elot * H orse W hisperer * Deep Impact * City of Angels

RomeoVan D yke at 30 1/2 M ile Rd., W ashington

(810) 752-3455 The Horse W hisperer * Godzilla

ShoresM ack so. of 9 M ile Rd., St. C la ir Shores

(810) 775-6800 O bject of My Affection * Scream ing II

Showcase SterlingVan D yke at 15 M ile Road

(810) 979-3160 The Truman Show * A Perfect Murder * Almost H eroes * H ope Floats * I Got the Hook Up * Godzilla * Bullworth * Fear and Loathing in Las V egas * Q uest for Cam elot * H orse W hisperer * D eep Impact * Titanic

Star GratiotG ratio t, n o rth of 15 M ile Rd.,

C lin ton T ow nsh ip (810) 791-3420

The Truman Show * A Perfect Murder * H ope Floats * Almost H eroes * Godzilla * I Got the Hook Up * Bullworth * F ear and Loathing in Las V egas * T he H orse W hisperer * D eep Im pact * Q u est for Cam elot

Sterling Center (AMC)S choenherr Rd. sou th of H all Rd.

(810) 254-7400 The Truman Show * A Perfect M urder ’ Almost H eroes * Hope Floats * Horse W hisperer * Q uest for C am elot * Godzilla * Bullworth * F ear and Loathing in Las Vegas * D eep Impact * City of Angels

Warren (Cinemark)D eq u in d re so u th of 12 M ile Rd., W arren

(810) 558-7520 Object of My Affection * Ride * Black Dog ’ Two Girls and a Guy * B arney’s Great A dventure * Wild Things * S pecies 2 * S cream 2 * M ousehunt * The R eplacem ent Killers * T he Man in the Iron M ask * As G ood As It G e ts * S e n se le s s * Mr. Nice Guy * U.S. M arshalls * Mercury Rising * H ush * W edding S inger

Washtenaw CountyBriarwood (U.A.)

In s id e th e B riarw ood M all, A nn A rbor (313) 480-4555

The Truman Show * Hope Floats * Almost H eroes * Bullworth * Godzilla * Q uest for Cam elot * D eep Impact

Fox Village Theatre (MJR)Jackson at M ap le , A nn A rbor

(313) 994-8080 O bject of My Affection * Two Girls and A G uy * Wild T h ings * B arney ’s G reat A dventure * M ercury Rising * W edding Singer

Showcase Ann ArborC arp en ter Rd., no rth , of 1-94, e. of US 23

(313) 973-8380 The Truman Show * A Perfect Murder * Almost H eroes * H ope Floats * I Got the Hook Up * Godzilla * Bullworth * Fear and Loathing in Las V egas * Q uest fo Cam elot * H orse W hisperer * D eep Impact * Titanic

Livingston CountyBrighton (MJR)

1-96 exit a t G rand River, B righton (810) 227-4700

The Truman Show * A Perfect M urder * Almost H eroes * H ope Floats * Godzilla * Bullworth ’ Q uest for C am elot * Horse W hisperer * D eep Impact

■ Sex and the City, 9 tonight, HBO — In recent interviews, Sarah Jessica Parker has expressed concern th a t the salty settings of her new 12- p art HBO series m ight negative-ly affect her big- / _ -A \ | y Mscreen movie ' -- \ w t t T limage. W hat image? Thelean, leggy \ / Highlightsactress wife of M atthewBroderick is so vapid and transpar-

MCFARLIN

9 tonight, CBS (Channel 62 in Detroit) — She’s on Broadway. On Nickelodeon. In those gawd-awful Km art commercials. She’s the

pudgy princess of

ent on cam era th a t she m ight as well be called Sarahn Wrap, making her a curious choice to s ta r in this lusty, explicit, original anthology based on the columns of New York Observer “sexual anthropologist” Carrie Bradshaw. Parker plays the cynical Bradshaw, trolling the bars, bou­tiques and back alleys of the Big Apple in search of absolute tru ths about m en and their attitudes on relationships. Kristin Davis (“Melrose Place”), Kim C attrall and Cynthia Nixon portray Bradshaw’s squad of assistan t sex investigators; Chris Noth (“Law & Order”) appears as “Mr. Big,” one of the columnist’s sta­ble of nameless, stereotypic males.■ Arm istead M aupin’s “More Tales o f th e City,” 9 tonight, Showtime — The TV adaptation of gay San Francisco columnist Arm istead M aupin’s “Tales of the City” sparked outrage and controversy when it aired on PBS in 1994. Four years later it’s a sure bet th a t this Showtime sequel to M aupin’s chroni­cle of San Francisco in the 1970s will make the original seem like “Upstairs, Downstairs” by compari­son. Given a more permissive arena on the pay-cable channel, the two- part updating promises to explore the sexual taboos th a t made public TV blush, as presented by the core ensemble cast from the original miniseries: Thomas Gibson (now seen on ABC’s h it sitcom “D harm a and Greg”), Laura Linney, Nina Siemaszko and the redoubtable Olympia Dukakis. P a rt Two airs a t 9 p.m. Monday.■ The 52nd A nnual Tony Awards,

daytime talk, and a certified movie actress. Is there nowhere we can escape the ponder­ous presence of Rosie O’Donnell?Surely not in New

York’s Radio City Music Hall, as ram ­paging Rosie hosts the annual acco­lades to the brightest lights on the Great White Way. Leading nominees include “Art,” “Golden Child,” “Freak” and “The Beauty Queen of Leenane” for best play and “The Lion King,” “Side Show,” “The Scarlet Pimpernel” and “Ragtime” for best musical. N athan Lane, Oscar winner Helen Hunt, Angela Lansbury and John Lithgow top the VIP list of those slat­ed to appear.■ The AFI Salute to Robert Wise,10 tonight, NBC (Channel 4 in Detroit) — W hat can you say about a m an who began his Hollywood resume by editing “Citizen Kane”? If you’re a member of the American Film Institute, you probably say,“Bob Wise, we are not worthy. You are a living legend in our humble business of moviemaking, and here’s a Life Achievement Award.” That will be the m antra of the AFI’s 26th trib­ute to a standout career in cinema, honoring the multifaceted Wise who went on to direct the classic musicals “West Side Story” (with Jerome

Robbins) and “The Sound of Music” (all by himself).■ Invasion Am erica, 9 p.m.Monday and Tuesday, the WB (Channel 20 in Detroit) — A prime-time cartoon science fic­tion miniseries, produced by Steven Spielberg? Say what you will about the WB: It’s not afraid to boldly go where no network has gone before. This two-night action “summer series event” — featuring the voices of Lorenzo Lamas,Robert Urich, Kristy McNichol and Leonard Nimoy among others — revolves around a square-jawed teen hero who discovers tha t he’s half alien and destined to defend the E arth against an invasion from outer space.Does NASA know about this? Magic■ The M agic Hour, 11:30 Magic p.m. Monday-Friday, Channel2 — Now we know why Channel 2 has been running those “M arried ... with Children” and “Who’s the Boss?” reruns on late night for so long. The station has been saving a spot, like putting two old retired guys in line to wait for Lakers playoff tickets, until Earvin “Magic” Johnson unveiled his syndi­cated weeknight talk hour. Now I take a backcourt position to no m an in my admiration for Lansing’s favorite son: national champion at MSU, finest point guard in NBA his­tory (even Isiah says so), role model for HIV activism, commercial pitch­m an supreme with a million-watt

J I M M Y M A C K ’S M A G N I F I C E N T M O V I E M E N U“N orth by N orthw est,” 11:30 today, Turner Classic Movies; “Gigi,” noon today, Cinemax; “G unga Din,” 6 tonight, Turner Classic Movies; “Ghost,” 9 tonight, TBS; “Then There Were G iants,” 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. Monday and Tuesday, the History Channel; “A liens,” 8 p.m. Monday, Cinemax; “The Great D ictator,” 4 a.m. .Tuesday, American Movie Classics; ‘M en in Black,” 9:15 a.m.

and 8 p.m. Tuesday, HBO; “The B lues Brothers,” 10:35 p.m. Tuesday and 1 p.m. Wednesday,TBS; “Mr. D eeds G oes to Town,” 11:30 a.m. Thursday, AMC; “Lolita,” 8 p.m. Thursday, Turner Classic Movies; “Good M orning,Vietnam ,” 9 p.m. Thursday and 1:30 p.m. Friday, USA; “Our M iss Brooks,” 11:30 a.m. Friday, Cinemax; “The R em ains o f the Day,” 8 p.m. Friday, USA.

Johnson moves to a new arena with “The Hour,” weeknights at 11:30 p.m. on Channel 2.

smile, businessm an committed to m aking investm ents in urban com­m unities. But can Magic pull an entertaining talk show out of his hat when he’s required to do more than flash th a t tradem ark grin? Hopefully he took note of Arsenio Hall’s dizzy­ing rise and fall: Monday’s opening- night guest list is scheduled to include Cher, Laurence Fishburne, Mel Gibson and Tyra Banks, with Sheila E. as resident bandleader. W hat can Magic possibly have up his sleeve to top th a t on Tuesday?■ World Cup ’98 Soccer, 11 a.m. Wednesday, ESPN — We call our sports championships the “World Series” and the “Super Bowl,” but then we Americans have always been a little egocentric. The true “world’s series,” soccer’s World Cup, kicks off today with a m atch between Scotland and defending champion Brazil, and more than a billion view­ers a day are expected to tune in for some part of the action through the final m atch on July 12. Holding the 1994 Cup m atches in the United States has sparked unprecedented American TV attention to the tourna­m ent this year, w ith ESPN and ABC heading the coverage.

Surfing for sex, sportsI f sex sells (and if it doesn’t, why does Ginger

leaving the Spice Girls ra te as front-page news?), then th is TV week should be a hotter item than Red Wings an tenna flags. Sex is being celebrated on big new series in big old cities from

coast to coast and the World Cup soccer tournam ent begins this week in France.

What, you don’t think those heavily muscled men running around in tight silk uniforms is sexy?

Ask your wife.

JUNE 7, 1998 PAGE 13

SATURDAY MORNING/AFTERNOON JUNE 13,1998

8:00BROADCAST CHANNELS

8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00

FOX 0 News Bill Nye Animals Click (El) Paid Prog. Student

4:30

In the Zone Major League Baseball: Cleveland Indians at New York Yankees. (In Stereo Live) Poltergeist: The LegacyNBC O (7:00) Today (In Stereo) Newsbeat Tday Saved-Bell City Guys Saved-Bell Hang Time Hang Time Inside Stuff Planting Season; Senior PGA Golf: BellSouth Senior C lassic at Opryland |WNBA BasketballABC 101Dalmts New Doug New Doug Recess Pepper Ann Bugs & T. Bugs & T. Jungle Pooh Science Gorilla Quest TBA |WorldCup |World Cup Soccer: Belgium vs. Netherlands. (Live)CBC O Theodore SesamePk Little Bear Skinnmrk Spilled Milk Cents Business Lead I Gardener Cottage Travels | Moving On Movie: ★★★ “The Divorce of Lady X "( 1938, Comedy) Equestrian IWB © PinkyBrain Superman MeninBIck Batman/Superman PinkyBrain Animaniacs Sylvester Adventures of Sinbad [ Movie: -k'h “Disorderlies" (1987) The Fat Boys, | Nightman "Face to Face” Beverly Hills, 902101UPN SD Ned’s Newt Rangers Spider-Man Toonslvnia Goosebmp Toonslvnia PickWeek Sam & Max Movie: *★ “Gotcha!" (1985) Anthony Edwards Movie: ★★ "American Ninja" (!% 5) Michael Dudikoff. Team Knight Rider (R)PBS © Northern Michigan Golfing Hometime Old House Workshop Michigan Anyplace Sportsman Great Lakes Cars I Collecting Woof-Dog’s |Your House Cooking [Grilling [Jacques Pepin’s KitchenCBS © Ghostwriter Fortune CBS News Saturday Morning (El) i Sports Weird Al SB Paid Proq. Paid Proq. Summer Celebrity Sports PBA Bowlinq (Live) I PGA Golf: Buick C lassic -- Third Round. (Live) [CABLE CHANNELSA&E (7:00) Movie: "Shooting" |Biography for Kids |Sea Tales (R) New Explorers (R) | Home Again Home Again |America’s Castles (R) |Grand Tour (R) Investigative Reports (R) |20th Century (R)AMC M ovie :** “Day of the Bad Man" (1958) |Movie: * * 1/2 "The M um m y" (1959) SB Movie: **V 4 T om ahaw k” (1951) Movie: * * * ' / 2 “Superman II" ( 1980) Christopher Reeve. ‘PG’ Movie: * * * “An Affair to Remember" (1957, Drama) 1BET Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Video Vibrations (R) Rap City Top 10 (R) |Teen Summit |Thea |Caribbean Rhythms Paid Prog. |Paid Prog. [Business Paid Prog.

3RAVO Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. |Paid Prog, Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Movie: “A Kid for Two Farthings” (1956) Movie: *** “Ju Dou" (1990, Drama) Gong Li. 'PG-13' Movie: ** “Silence of the North" 098] ) Ellen Burstyn. ArtsbreakCOM Movie: **'/2 "National Lampoon’s Vacation" (1983) Ben Stein Ben Stein Saturday Night Live BB Daily Show Daily Show Premium One Night Odd Couple Odd Couple Odd Couple Odd Couple Absolutely AbsolutelyDISC Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Interior Motives (R) Housesmart! (R) Great Chefs | Great Chefs Gimme Shelter (R) Invention Wonder Wings “ Eyes in the Sky” Storm News Discover Magazine (R)

E! One Day One Day Gossip Fashion File Fashion Talk Soup (R) News Weekend (R) Attractions Behind Miss USA-Scns. Talk Soup (R) Gossip (R)ESPN Outdoors Fishin’ Hole Sportsman |Outdoors Fly Fishing Sportscenter Saturday Outside the Lines (R) Auto Racing: ARCA Bondo Mar-Hyde 200 NASCAR Goes Flying LPGA Golf (Live)FAM Rifleman Rifleman High Chaparral Movie: * * * * “All the President’s Men" (1976, Drama) Robert Redford. 30 Bonanza-Lost I Big Valley Rifleman Rifleman High ChaparralFSD Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Tigers | Baseball This Week in NASCAR Auto Racing: Formula One -- Canadian Grand Prix: Highlights. (R) Preview RugbyHIST Traveler (R) Gadget Boy GadgtTrip Trips USA Year-Kids History Makers (R) Air Combat Masters of War Combat at Sea (R) |Weapons at War (R) Monuments to FreedomLIFE Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Designing Designing Golden Golden Next Door Attitudes Women’s Film Festival (R) Movie: “Lying Eyes"NICK Doug ED Muppets Tiny Toon Tiny Toon Rugrats SB Beavers Hey Arnold! Monsters Rocko Hidden Key Looney You Do [Crazy Kids |Gadget |HeyDude Pete & Pete | ClarissaSCIFI Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Movie: *★ “Casshan: Robot Hunter" (1994) Amazing Sliders Sliders “ Genesis" (R) BB |Sliders (R) (In Stereo) BB Movie: * * * ' / 2 “Terminator2: Judgment D ay” (1991) Arnold Schwarzenegger. ®TBS Flintstones Scooby Videos Videos National Geographic Explorer (R) SB Movie: "The Bad News Bears in Breaking Training" Movie: * * “Airborne” (1993) Shane McDermott. “Saved by the Bell"TLC Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Home Pro Home Pro Furniture | Furniture Home Again | Home Again Hometime | Hometime | Renovation | Renovation MenTlblts |HomeSvy |Hometime |Hometime Home Again | Home AgainTNT Wild, Wild West Wild, Wild West Brisco County Babylon 5 (In Stereo) 30 Movie: * * * “Parents" (1989, Horror) Randy Quaid. Movie: ** “Mr. Nanny" (1993) Terry “ Hulk" Hogan. “The Secret Agent Club"USA Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. WWF LiveWire Pacific Blue “ Caretakers” Movie: **’/;2 “Eve of Destruction" (1990) |Movie: "Meteorites!” (1998) Tom Wopat. (In Stereo) BB Movie: ** '7 2 “Pet Sematary” ! 1989) ff l 1DISN Bear Mermaid Amazing Amazing It’s a Trip® “DuckTales the Movie -- Treasure" “Rescuers Down" |Movie: * * ' / 2 "D3: The Mighty Ducks"(1996) ‘PG’ BB |Torkelsons Sitters Flash | Bug Juice IHBO Movie: *** “Dragonslayer" (1981) Peter MacNicol. SB Speed 2 Movie: ** “The In Crowd” (1988) ‘PG’ Movie: "Address Unknown" (1997) Kyle Howard. ‘PG’ | DrDolittle Movie: “A Very Brady Sequel" (1996) ® M ovie:** “FatherHood" 1MAX Movie: ** “Collision Course"( 1987) Jay Leno. ‘PG’ SB Movie: **Vi2 "State Fa/r” (1933) |Movie: *V4 "Freaked"(1993) ‘PG-13’ BB Movie: *** T e x ” (1982) Matt Dillon. Movie: **'/2 “Born Yesterday" (1993) Melanie Griffith. “Summer" 1SHO Busy World | Busy World Busy World | Busy World Busy World |Busy World |Movie: “Rescuers: Stories of Courage - Two Couples" Movie: * * 1/2 “Hero"{ 1992) Dustin Hoffman. 'PG-13' BB Fast Track | Fast Track (In Stereo) ® “DAR.Y .L."]TMC (7:00) Movie: "GoldenEye” Movie: *** "Sneakers"(1992, Adventure) Robert Redford. ‘PG-13’ |Movie: *** “Bedazzled"(1967) Movie: *** “Tucker: The Man and His Dream" (1988) Movie: *★ “City Hall" (1996, Drama) A l Pacino. ‘R’ ® 1SATURDAY EVENING JUNE 13,1998

5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 1:00 1:30

0FOX

Outer Limits "Stream of Consciousness" SB

News M*A*S*H“ Springtime"

X-Files “ Colony” (In Stereo) (Part 1 of 2) BB

Cops (R) (In Stereo) (PA)

Cops “ Las Vegas" BB

America’s Most Wanted: America Fights Back ®

News Cheers 30 Mad TV (R) (In Stereo) ® Tales From the Crypt ®

Tales From the Crypt ffl

Almost Live! (R)

AmericanAthlete

ONBC

WNBA Basketball: Liberty at Comets

News SB NBC Nightly News 30

Wheel of Fortune ®

Road to Riches BB

Movie: * * “Lightning Jack” (1994) Paul Hogan. A mute townsman tags along with a mildly famous outlaw. ®

Profiler (R) (In Stereo) ® News BB Saturday Night Live Actress Sarah Michelle Gellar, music group Portishead.

Jerry Springer ffl

oABC

Boxing: Freddie Norwood vs. Genaro Rios. (Live)

News ABC Wld News

Entertainment Tonight (InStereo) BB

Movie: * * * “In the Name of the Father" (1993, Drama) Daniel Day-Lewis, Emma Thompson. An Irishman and his son are wrongly imprisoned in Britain. (In Stereo) ®

News Movie: * * ' / 2 "The Running M an” (1987) Arnold Schwarzenegger. Athletes hunt convicted prisoners on a sadistic game show.

oCBC

Equestrian: Canadian Pacific World Cup. SB

Saturday Report 30

Fashion File30

NHLPregame

Stanley Cup Playoffs: Finals Game 3 -- Teams to Be Announced. (Time Approximate) (Live) BB

To Be Announced

Saturday Report BB

Movie: ★* “That Kind of Woman" (1959) Sophia Loren. A woman tries to find love with a young soldier.

(Off Air)

©WB

Baywatch "Surf C ity" (R) (In Stereo) SB

Fame L.A. “The Key to Success” (R) (In Stereo) SB

Earth: Final Conflict“ Scarecrow Returns" (R)

Movie: * * * “New Jack City" (1991) W esley Snipes. Two street-smart cops try to bust a venomous drug lord.

Soldier of Fortune, Inc.“ Apre Vu” (R)

Ghost Stories FIX: The Series"Unfinished Business” (R)

Q Slim Honey-mooners

©UPN

Viper “ Trust No O ne” (R) (In Stereo) SB

FreshPrince

Martin (InStereo) IB)

Martin (InStereo) ®

Living Single ®

Major League Baseball: Detroit Tigers at Kansas City Royals. From Kauffman Stadium. (Live)

News BB Viper “ Regarding Catlett" (R) (In Stereo) ®

Wild Things A family of manatees; sea snakes, ffl

Movie: “Out of Sync"

©PBS

Jacques Pepin’s Kitchen: Cooking With Claudine

Lawrence Welk Show“Vacation Show”

Keeping Up BeingServed

Austin City Limits “The Allman Brothers Band” (R)

Ballykissangel “ Lost Sheep"

Nova “ Treasures of the Sunken City" (In Stereo) BB

MontyPython

Monty Python’s Flying Circus Agatha Christie. ®

Ballykissangel “ Lost Sheep"

©CBS

(3:00) PGA Golf: Buick Classic -- Third Round. SB

PaidProgram

CBS News Pensacola: Wings of Gold “ Bogey M an" (R)

Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman (R) (In Stereo) 30

Early Edition "The W edding" (In Stereo) BB

Walker, Texas Ranger“Tribe" (R) (In Stereo) BB

NYPD Blue “ Un-American G raffiti" (In Stereo) ®

Soul Train Chico DeBarge, Silk 130, Joe. (In Stereo)

Pensacola: Wings of Gold “ Bogey Man" (R)

A&EAmerican Justice "The Preppie Murder” (R)

American Justice“ Defending the Mob” (R)

Mysteries of the Bible“ Samson and Delilah”

Biography This Week Investigative Reports“ Murder at Fort Devens”

Movie: * * 1/2 “The Drowning Pool" (1975, Mystery) A detective is hired to find who wrote a certain letter.

Biography This Week (R) Investigative Reports"M urder at Fort Devens”

AMCMovie: * *1/2 "Night Passage" (1957, Adventure) James Stewart, Dan Duryea.

Movie: * * ' / 2 "City Beneath the Sea" (1953, Adventure) Robert Ryan.

Movie: * * * “Tammy and the Bachelor" (1957, Comedy) Debbie Reynolds.

Movie: * * * “Robin and the Seven Hoods" (1964) A Chicago hoodlum unwittingly becomes a local hero.

Movie: *'/2 “ The Angry Red Planet" (1959, Science Fiction) Gerald Mohr.

M o v ie :*** “Hollywoodor Bust"( 1956) Dean Martin.

BET Teen Summit (R) Thea | Planet Groove Top 20 (R) Hit List |Comicview |Comicview 227® Paid Prog. [Movie: * * 1/2 “Black Caesar” ( 1973) Fred W illiamson. |

BRAVOMovie: * * * ' / 2 "A Kid for Two Farthings" (1956, Fantasy) Diana Dors.

L’Elisir D’Amore Luciano Pavarotti and Kathleen Battle star in Donizetti's opera about a phony love potion. (R)

Movie: * * * ’/2 “Julia" (1977) Jane Fonda. A friend draws a writer into wartime Resistance efforts. ‘PG’

Movie: * * “Silence of the North” (1981) A woman finds loneliness and hardship in remote Canada. ‘PG’

Movie: * ★ * V2 “Julia" (1977) Jane Fonda. ‘PG’

COMDYAbsolutelyFabulous

AbsolutelyFabulous

Make Me Laugh

Make Me Laugh

SportJerks NBA Tour

JeffFoxworthy

Brett Butler: Sold Out (R)

Paula Poundstone: Live From Harvard Yard (R)

One Night Stand

South Park(R)

Viva Variety(R )®

PremiumBlend

JeffFoxworthy

Movie: * * “Still Smokin"’ (1983, Comedy) Tommy Chong, Cheech Marin.

PulpComics VI

DISCSupertrains! (R) Rocketships (R) Robot Warriors (R) Wild Discovery “ Wild

Fathers" (R)Ultimate Guide: Sharks(R)

Justice Files “The Trackers" (R)

New Detectives "Deadly Target" (R)

Wild Discovery “ Wild Fathers" (R)

Ultimate Guide: Sharks(R)

E!News Weekend (R) Playmates of the 199Qs

(R)FashionEmergency

Model TV(R)

Talk Soup (R) Movie: * * “The Dead Can’t Lie" (1988, Drama) A detective looks for a woman believed dead for 10 years.

Howard Stern (R)

Howard Stern (R)

Sex on the Riviera An insider's look at the “ unofficial" 1 Cannes Film Festival in southern France. (R)

ESPNLPGA Golf: Oldsmobile Classic -- Third Round.

Superbouts: Alexis Arguello vs. Aaron Pryor.

Sports-center

Quest for the Cup

Stanley Cup Playoffs: Finals Game 3 -- Teams to Be Announced. (Live) BB Sportscenter ® BaseballTonight

World’s Strongest Man Competition

Timber Series (R)

FAMBonanza: The Lost Episodes “ Child"

Movie: **Vi2 "Face to Face" (1990, Comedy-Drama) A m iner’s land rights are challenged by an anthropologist.

Movie: “The Cowboy and the Movie Star" (1998, Adventure) Sean Young, Perry King. (In Stereo) 30

Movie: * * * “The Main Event" (1979, Comedy) A bankrupt tycoon’s only asset is a cowardly boxer. BB

Super Bloopers & New Practical Jokes

PaidProgram

PaidProgram

FSD Rugby: Canada vs. U.S. NHL-Shots |Red Wings NFL Europe Football: Amsterdam Admirals at Scottish Claymores. FOX Sports News | FOX Sports News Last Word | Boxing: Mexico vs. United States.

HISTHidden History of Boston A tour through Boston encompassing the city ’s 365-year history. (R)

Modern Marvels “ Mount Rushmore" (R)

Highway Hangouts: Celebrating America’s Roadside Attractions (R)

Movie: * * "Don’t Look Back: The Story of Leroy Satchel Paige" (1981, Biography) Louis Gossett Jr..

Highway Hangouts: Celebrating America’s Roadside Attractions (R)

LIFE(4:00) Movie: "Lying Eyes" (1996) Cassidy Rae.

Movie: “Final Justice" (1998, Drama) Annette O ’Toole. An outraged woman takes an amoral attorney hostage.

Movie: “Dead by Sunset" begins an affair with a socio

995, Drama) Ken Olin, Lindsay Frost, Annette O ’Toole. An unsuspecting doctor oath.

Girls’ Night Out Stand-up comedy with Jane Wallace.

Night Court PaidProgram

NICKWonder Years SB

Are You Afraid?

Figure It Out

Rocko’s [Modern Life

Doug (InStereo) 30

AngryBeavers

Rugrats (InStereo) BB

^ l l That (R)(In Stereo)

Kenan & Kel (R)

AllenStrange

BradyBunch

BradyBunch

Happy Days Wonder Years ®

Taxi “ Blind Date” ®

Dick Van Dyke

BobNewhart

Newhart ffl

SCIFI Mystery Science Theater 3000 Sightings: Bioperfection-New Human Race Movie: “The Outsider" (1997) David Leisure. ® Mystery Science Theater 3000 (R) Movie: “The Outsider"ffl |

TBS(4:05) Movie: "Saved by the Bell"

WCW Saturday Night 30 Major League Baseball: Montreal Expos at Atlanta Braves. From Turner Field. (Live) BB

Movie: **★ “Romancing the Stone" (1984, Adventure) Michael Douglas. An adventurer helps a novelist find her kidnapped sister.

Movie: * * “Airborne" (1993, Comedy) Shane McDermott, Seth Green.

TLC How'd They Do That? Night Shift (R) Knights of Newark (R) Sports Disasters [Greatest Escape Artists 1Comedy Club Superstars |Sports Disasters (R) [Greatest Escape Artists Comedy Club Superstars 1

TNT(4:00) Movie: * '/2 "The [Secret Agent Club” (1996)

Movie: * “Mannequin: On the M ove” (1991, Fantasy) A I clerk frees a cursed peasant from her mannequin body.

Movie: **★ “Urban Cowboy" (1980, Drama) John Travolta, Debra Winger, Scott Glenn. A Texas oil worker looks for love at a popular h o n ky-to n k .______ _______

Movie: **★ “Parents" (1989, Horror) Randy Quaid. A boy suspects that his parents m ight be cannibals.

Movie: * “Mannequin: On 1 the M ove" (1991, Fantasy) |

USA(3:30) Movie Movie: * *★ "La Femme Nikita" (1991, Drama) Anne Parillaud. A

convicted murderess gets another chance as an assassin. OSMovie: ★ *’/2 "The Professional"(1994, Drama) Jean Reno. A hit man takes an orphan girl under his wing. BB

Movie: * * ' / : 2 “Romeo Is Bleeding” (1993, Drama) A sultry criminal catches a cop in her deadly clutches.

Movie: * ’/2 “Top Dog” (1995, Adventure) Chuck Norris. 1 A cop and his new canine partner track down terrorists. |

DISNBug Juice( R ) f f l

Growing Pains SB

Growing Pains 3B

Muppets Tonight! 30

Movie: **V a "Air Bud" (1997, Comedy- Drama) Michael Jeter. ‘PG’ ®

Movie: * * ’/2 “D3: The Mighty Ducks” (1996) Hockey I misfits skate on thin ice at a private academy. ‘PG’ BB

Growing Pains BB

Walt Disney Presents:EPCOT Center

Zorro (InStereo) ®

Spin and Marty (R) ffl

Movie: * * ' / 2 "Make Mine 1 Music" (1946, Musical) ffl |

HBO(4:00) Movie Movie: * * * “Romeo <S Juliet" (1996, Drama) Leonardo DiCaprio.

Two youths from rival families share a doomed love affair. ’PG-13’ SBMovie: * "Speed 2: Cruise Control" (1997) A madman seizes the helm of a luxurious ocean liner. ‘PG-13’ 3B

Boxing: Patrick Charpentier vs. Oscar De La Hoya. Oscar De La Hoya defends his WBC welterweight title.

Arliss (InStereo) ffl

Movie: * '/2 "Turbulence" (1997, Suspense) Ray Liotta. (In Stereo) ‘R’ ffl |

MAX(4:30) Movie: * * "Summer Rental” (1985)

Movie: * * ' / 2 "SpaceCamp" (1986) Teens at summer camp are accidentally launched into space. ‘PG’

Movie: * * 1/2 “Uptown Saturday Night" [1974) Trouble finds two friends visiting their favorite hangout. ‘PG’ BB

Movie: * * * “ The Devil’s Own" (1997) Harrison Ford. A New York cop unknowingly shelters an Irish terrorist. ‘R’

Movie: * “Stripshow" (1996, Drama) Tane McClure. (In Stereo) ‘R ’

Movie: * ’/4 “Electra"' R'

SHO(4:30) Movie: * * " D . A / m . ’’ (1985) ‘PG’

Movie: * * * "Sister Act” A Reno lounge singer poses as a nun to elude mob assassins. ‘PG’ 30

Movie: ★★* “My Best Friend’s Wedding" \ (1997, Comedy) Julia Roberts. ‘PG-13’ BB

Friend’sWed.

Movie: * * * ’/2 "Basic Instinct" (1992) A cop has a steamy affair with a woman who may be a killer. ‘R’ BB

Red Shoe Diaries ®

Hunger“ Necros” ffl

Hot Springs Hotel |

* “Desert Passion"

TMC(4:55) Movie: * * "Green /ce " (1981, Adventure) Ryan O'Neal. (In Stereo) ‘PG’

Movie: * * * “GoldenEye" (1995, Adventure) Pierce Brosnan. James Bond enters Russia to retrieve stolen weapon codes. ‘PG-13’ 3B

Harlequin’s Diamond Girl (In Stereo) Movie: "Flashdance" (1983) A woman welder enjoys a nighttime dancing career.

Movie: ★* "Vibrations" (1994) Christina Applegate. A 1 disfigured musician finds redemption through love. ‘R’ |

MONDAY MORNING/AFTERNOON JUNE 8,1998 |

8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30

FOX 0 (6:00) News Forgive or Forget 33 Geraldo Rivera 33 Real TV 33 | Real TV 33 News Pictionary Hollywood | Extra E Geraldo Rivera E Ricki Lake (R) Rosie O’Donnell ENBC O (7:00) Today (In Stereo) 33 Maury 33 Jerry Springer 33 Jenny Jones (In Stereo) News 33 Jeopardy! Days of Our Lives E Another World E Montel Williams (R) E Sally EABC o Good Morning America Regis & Kathie Martha Gayle King People’s Court (In Stereo) News Pt. Charles All My Children E One Life to Live E General Hospital E Oprah Winfrey ECBC o (7:00) CBC Morning News Playground |SesamePk Theodore Mr. Dressup Wimzie | Life Signs Midday 33 Encore to Pamela Wallin E.N.G “ Suspicious M inds" Coronat’n Urban P. Jonovision The BillWB © Mask JonQuest Medicine Woman 700 Club In the Heat of the Night 3’s Co. [Hillbillies Hawaii Five-0 “ Cocoon" Bananas X-Men E BugsDaffy Animaniacs PinkyBrain BatmanUPN © Wacky Bobby Life-Louie |Step-Step Spoons Blossom 33 Sunset Beach 33 Movie: k k “Ready to Wear (Pret-a-Porter)" (1994) Mr. Cooper Dinosaurs Metallix Spider-Man Turtles RangersPBS S3 Magic Bus Puzzle Sesame Street (R) 33 Barney Mr Rogers Charlie |Wimzies Teletubbies Sesame Street (R) E Reading Barney Couch Arthur E Magic Bus Sandiego WishboneCBS © (7:00) This Morning 33 Quincy Guiding Light (In Stereo) Price Is Right 33 Debt Young and the Restless Bold & B. As the World Turns E Judge Judy Judge Judy Newlywed Dating

A&E Columbo “ The Most Dangerous Match” jColumbo “ Double Shock” |Quincy |Northern Exposure 33 |Law & Order “ Confession” |Columbo “The Most Dangerous Match” |Columbo "Double Shock”AMC (7:30) Movie: “Manila" Movie: * ’/2 “Marines, Let’s G o ” (1961) |Movie: ★ * * “Battle Hymn" (1957) Rock Hudson. 33 |Movie: t-k'A “The Outsider" (1961) Tony Curtis. Movie: “Battle at Bloody Beach" (1961) |Movie: “Battle Cry” (1955) 1BET Life Leonard Video Vibrations Jam Zone |jam Zone Planet Groove Top 20 (R) | Rap City

3RAVO Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. |Paid Prog. | Paid Prog. |Paid Prog. Movie: ***■ "Bert Rigby, You’re a Fool" (1989) ‘R’ Movie: “The Blue Kite" (1993, Drama) Lu Liping. 'NR' jMovie: k k k “Memoirs of a River" ( 1989) 1COM Dr. Katz Daily Show Movie: * ' / 2 “Stewardess School" (1986) Brett Cullen. Saturday Night Live 33 Kids in Hall | Ben Stein Daily Show |Dr. Katz Odd Couple |Make-Laugh Saturday Night Live E ★ * “Johnny Dangerously"DISC Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Assignment Discovery Home Matters (R) Housesmart! (R) Interior Motives (R) Home Matters (R) Housesmart! (R) Interior Motives (R) Great Chefs | Great Chefs

E! One Day One Day Kate & Allie (Attractions High Rollers (R) Theme Parks A-Go-Go Fashion | Model (R) Godzilla Mania (R) Talk Soup (R) One Day Kate & Allie Melrose Place (In Stereo)ESPN Sportscenter (R) Sportscenter (R) Sportscenter (R) Sportscenter (R) Sportscenter (R) Auto Racing: CART FedEx Champ. - Detroit Gr. Prix Auto Racing: NASCAR Grand National 1FAM Rescue 911 (In Stereo) 33 Christy “ Green Apples” 33 700 Club | Burnett Diagnosis Murder 33 Home & Family (In Stereo) |ShopDrop Shopping Big ValleyFSD Fit TV Body Waves Paid Prog. |Paid Prog. Paid Prog. | Pro Beach Volleyball: AVP. Last Word | Pennant Turner Cup Playoffs: Championship Game 4 -- Chicago Wolves at Detroit Vipers. Tigers [Spike (R)HIST Classroom: Revolution History Showcase (R) Movie: “Then There Were Giants" (1994, Drama) Real West Short History of Ireland (R) |Battle Line |Movie: “Then There Were Giants” (1994, Drama)LIFE Baby Kids These Sisters (In Stereo) 33 L.A. Law 33 Thirtysomething 33 Night Court Attitudes Unsolved Mysteries Movie: "Lightning in a Boff/e” (1994) Lynda Carter. Designing Designing 1NICK CharlieB Rugrats 33 Little Bear [BluesCiues Busy World |Muppets Wubbulous jGullah Little Bear BluesCiues Allegra Rupert Muppets Looney CharlieB |DougE Garfield GarfieldSCIFI Voyage to Bottom of Sea Lost in Space 33 Land of the Giants Incredible Hulk “ Ricky" Twilight Zone 33 Gallery Bradbury Swamp Odyssey E Lost in Space E Battlestar GalacticaTBS Gilligan 3’s Co. Little House Little House Mama Mama Matlock “The Getaway” E Movie: k'A “Another You” (1991) Richard Pryor. Flintstones Flintstones Looney DreamsTLC Skinnmrk Pappyland Big Garage |Bingo Salty’s | Skinnmrk Critters Critters Work in Progress (R) Onlnside |Great Inns Inntimate llnntimate Wedding Wedding Furniture Hometime 1TNT CHiPs “ Speedway Fever” CHiPs "A larm ed” Charlie’s Angels Spenser: For Hire Movie: kkk 'A “ The Shootist" (1976) John Wayne. Movie: * * * "Shenandoah” (1965) James Stewart. In the Heat of the NightUSA Facts-Life Facts-Life Gimme B. Strangers Wings 33 Wings 33 Major Dad Movie: ★ + * “Once Around” ( 1990) Richard Dreyfuss. (In Stereo) Movie: * * * “Skin Deep" (1989) John Ritter. Baywatch “ Sail Away" EDISN Goof Troop Mickey Mermaid Pooh Bear Otter Chip-Dale Madeline | Mermaid |Pooh | Jungle Tale Spin E Donald [Chip-Dale |Tale Spin E [Goof Troop Timon |Aladdin EHBO Movie: “Address Unknown" (1997) ‘PG’ Movie: * ★ '/ 2 "Real Genius"( 1985) Val Kilmer. ‘PG’ Movie: kk'A “Finnegan Begin Again” (1985, Comedy) Chimps Movie: k'A "House Arrest" (1996) Jamie Lee Curtis. E “Address Unknown" (1997)MAX (7:00) Movie: “Raisin-Sun" Movie: * * ' / ! 2 “Who’s Minding the Mint?"( 1967) Movie: * * * “Sommersby” { 1993) Richard Gere. 33 |Movie: -k-k'A “ The Stars Fell on Henrietta"(1995) ‘PG’ Movie: ★ “The Shrimp on the Barbie" “Phantom" 1SHO Busy World Busy World Busy World |Busy World | Busy World | Busy World Busy World |Movie: * ★ "Sing"( 1989) Lorraine Bracco. ‘PG-13’ E l |Movie: “Broadway Danny Rose” (1984) Movie: * "The Invisible Kid" (1988) ‘PG’ "Music Box" ITMC (7:00) Movie Movie: * * * ’/2 “Serpico" (1973, Drama) Al Pacino. (In Stereo) ‘R’ 33 Movie: k k "Old Explorers" (1990) ‘PG’ |Movie: kk'A "Bugsy Malone" (1976) 'G ' |Movie: kk 'A "Denise Calls Up" (1995) |Movie: k k k "U2 Rattle and Hum" (1988) |

MONDAY EVENING JUNE 8,1998 |

5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 1:00 1:30

0FOX

News News News Married...With

AccessHollywood

Extra (InStereo) 33

Damon (InStereo) 33

Getting Personal 33

Ally McBeal "The Affair" (R) (In Stereo) E

News Cheers E Magic Hour Celebrity interviews. E

Married...With

M*A‘ S*H E Who’s the Boss? E

ONBC

News 33 News 33 NBC Nightly News 33

Wheel of Fortune 33

Jeopardy!33

Suddenly Susan 33

House Rules 33

Caroline in the City E

Caroline in the City E

Dateline (In Stereo) E News E Tonight Show (In Stereo) E

Jenny Jones Parents and children reunite. (In Stereo)

PaidProgram

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News News ABC Wld News

Ent. Tonight America's Funniest Home Videos (In Stereo)

20/20 E Practice “ Search and Seizure" (R) (In Stereo) E

News Nightline E Inside Edition E

American Journal E

Politically Incorrect E

Ent. Tonight

oCBC

To Be Announced

News 33 CBC News Forgotten Warriors 33 Father Ted Absolutely Fabulous 33

Making of Riverdance: A Journey (R)

National/CBC News E National Update E

News E Marguerite Volant (R)(Part 3 of 11)

(Off Air)

6 3WB

Full House(In Stereo)

Boy Meets World 33

Family Matters SB

Different World 33

Roseanne(In Stereo)

Mama’sFamily

7th Heaven "W ho Knew?" (R) (In Stereo) SB

Invasion America "The L e g e n d "E

Roseanne(In Stereo)

Mama’sFamily

Cops (InStereo) E

LAPD: Life on the Beat

HighwayPatrol

StrangeUniverse

PaidProgram

Honey-mooners

©UPN

Simpsons(In Stereo)

Living Single 33

Simpsons(In Stereo)

HomeImprove.

Frasier"O ops” 33

HomeImprove.

Love Boat: The Next Wave (R) (In Stereo) 83

Clueless (InStereo) E

Clueless (InStereo) E

News FreshPrince

Star Trek: The Next Generation "E th ics" E

Vibe The Artist. Coach"U psized" E

©PBS

Kratts’Creatures

ScienceGuy

Newshour With Jim Lehrer 33

BusinessReport

MotorWeek(In Stereo)

Going Places “ Sydney" (R) (In Stereo) 33

People’s Century “ Lost Peace” (In Stereo) E

Cancer Wars: “ Moving the Target" E

BeingServed

Mr. Bean“ Mr. Bean"

Going Places “ Sydney" (R) (In Stereo) E

People’s Century “ Lost Peace" (In Stereo) E

©CBS

Grace Under Fire

Mad About You 33

Seinfeld (InStereo) 33

Mad About You 33

CBS News Hard Copy33

Everybody-Raymond

Everybody-Raymond

Everybody-Raymond

Everybody-Raymond

Michael Hayes "Faith" (In Stereo) E

Late Show (In Stereo) E Murphy Brown E

Late Late Show Actress Suzanne Somers. E

In Depth Detroit

A&EQuincy “ No Way to Treat a Flower"

Northern Exposure “ Baby B lues" 33

Law & Order "Confession" 33

Biography “ Andy Warhol: A Life at the Edge"

Poirot “ Double Sin" Sherlock Holmes Mysteries

Law & Order "S ilence" E Biography "Andy Warhol: A Life at the Edge" (R)

Poirot "Double Sin" (R)

AMC(4:00) Movie: * * * "Battle C ry” (1955, Drama) Van Heflin, Aldo Ray.

Movie: kk'A “Red Ball Express" (1952, Drama) Jeff Chandler, Sidney Poitier. 33

Movie: “The Story of Dr. Wassell"( 1944, Drama) Gary Cooper, Laraine Day. A dedicated doctor rescues men from the Japanese.

Movie: kkk 'A “So Proudly We Hail” (1943, Drama) Three Army nurses witness the horrors of World W ar II.

Movie: "Bombardier” ( 1943) American fliers study at a bomber training school.

BET (4:30) Rap City 227 33 | Planet Groove | Hit List |Comicview | BET Tonight 227 E Midnight Love

BRAVO(3:30) Movie: "Memoirs of a River” ( 1989) 'NR'

Movie: ★ ★ ’/2 “Gulliver’s Travels"(1977, Fantasy) Richard Harris. ‘G ’

Take a Moment 33

Movie: * * * “The Blue Kite" (1993, Drama) Lu Liping, Pu Quanxin, Li Xuejian. A family is torn apart in politically turbulent China. 'NR'

Movie: kk 'A “Erendira"( 1983, Drama) Irene Papas, Claudia Ohana. ‘NR’

England, My England M ichael Ball stars in this musical 1 biography of composer Henry Purcell. (R)

COMDY(4:00) Movie: ★★ “Johnny Dangerously" ( 1984)

Odd Couple Make Me Laugh

Daily Show(R)

Stein’sMoney

Movie: k k “Johnny Dangerously" (1984, Comedy) A lad turns to crime to pay his mother's hospital bills.

Comics Come Home (R) Daily Show Stein’sMoney

Saturday Night Live EdAsner, the Kinks. E

SportJerks I NBA Tour

Daily Show I(R)

DISCTravelers “ Hops Festival: Poperinge, Belgium" (R)

Wings “ Rescue Mission”(R)

Gimme Shelter (R) Wild Discovery: “Wolves at Our Door” (R)

Rocketships (R) Treasures of the Earth(R)

Justice FilesAuto theft. (R'

“ Car Crime” Wild Discovery: “ W olves at Our Door” (R)

Rocketships (R)

E!Uncut Behind the

Scenes (R)Talk Soup Coming

AttractionsNews Daily Gossip Bob Crane: The True

Hollywood Story (R)Mysteries & Scandals

FashionEmergency

Talk Soup(R)

Night Stand HowardStern

Howard Stern (R)

Melrose Place “ In-Laws and O utlaws" (In Stereo)

Talk Soup |(R)

Night Stand

ESPNAutoRacing

NBA Inside Stuff

Up Close Sportscenter In theSportslight

Up Close Special WNBAPreview

Billiards: Ultimate Nine- Ball Challenge.

BaseballTonight

Sportscenter E BaseballTonight

X-Games Trials: Stop Two.

Running & Racing (R)

FAMBonanza: The Lost Episodes “ W inter Kill"

CarolBurnett

CarolBurnett

Movie: “Dad, the Angel & Me" ( 1995) Judge Reinhold. A guardian angel helps a girl adjust to her new life. 33

Diagnosis Murder “The Murder Trade” (In Stereo)

Hawaii Five-0 "Odd Man ln ” E

700 Club Bonanza: The Lost Episodes

PaidProgram

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FSD Crank (R) |Last Word Sports Tigers Major League Baseball: Houston Astros at Detroit Tigers. From Tiger Stadium. FOX Sports News FOX Sports News Last Word |NFL Europe Football

HISTReal West “ Stagecoach and the Pony Express”

Short History of Ireland (R) Take a Moment 33

Infamous Dreyfus Affair(R)

Rockets! (R) (Part 1 of 4)E

Trains Unlimited“ Railroad Police”

Secrets of World War II“ Human Torpedoes" (R)

Infamous Dreyfus Affair(R)

Rockets! (R) (Part 1 of 4)E

LIFEGolden Girls 33

Golden Girls 33

Supermar­ket Sweep

Debt Intimate Portrait “ Ricki Lake" (R) (In Stereo) 33

Unsolved Mysteries (InStereo)

Movie: “She Fought Alone" ( 1995, Drama) A teen files suit against the school board after her rape.

NewAttitudes E

Golden Girls E

Golden Girls E

Unsolved Mysteries (InStereo)

Homicide:Life

NICKYou Afraid? Rocko’s

Modern LifeFigure It Out

Tiny Toon Adventures

Doug (InStereo) 33

Take a Moment 33

Kenan & Kel (R)

BradyBunch

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Wonder Years E

Happy Days Bewitched I Love Lucy33

Mary Tyler Moore E

Taxi E Newhart E Dick Van Dyke

BobNewhart

SCIFI Six Million Dollar Man Movie: *★'/2 ‘T rem ors” (1990, Horror) Kevin Bacon. 33 Sliders (In Stereo) 33 Sliders “Genesis” E Sliders (In Stereo) E Sliders Amazing Sliders (R) (In Stereo) E Sliders “ Genesis" (R) E 1

TBSSaved by the Bell 33

Saved by the Bell 33

Family Matters 33

Family Matters 33

AndyGriffith

Major League Baseball: Boston Red Sox at Atlanta Braves. From Turner Field. (Live) 33

Movie: kk 'A “Another 48 HRS. ” (1990), Nick Nolte A detective and a convict reunite to catch a drug kingpin.

Movie: kk 'A “Shaft’s Big Score!" (1972, 1 Mystery) Richard Roundtree.

TLC Hometime HomeSvy Renovation Renovation Home Again Home Again Extreme Machines (R) |World of Amusement (Productive Detonations Extreme Machines (R) | World of Amusement Productive Detonations I

TNTKung Fu: The Legend Continues (R)

Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman

Babylon 5 “ Eyes” (In Stereo) 33

WCW Monday Nitro (In StereoLive) 33 Movie: kk 'A “Thicker Than Blood" (1998, Drama) A graduate takes a job teaching at an inner-city school. E

WCW Monday Nitro (R)(In Stereo) E

USASaved by Bell

USA High(In Stereo)

Baywatch “ Bash at the Beach” (In Stereo) 33

Highlander: The Series"Black Tower” (In Stereo)

Walker, Texas Ranger"Rainbow W arrior” 33

World Wrestling Federation Raw E

WWF War Zone (InS te re o )E

Silk Stalkings “ Family Affairs" (R) (In Stereo) E

Highlander: The Series"Unusual Suspects” E

C-NetCentral

Magnum,P.I.E

DISNDinosaurs33

Growing Pains 33

Growing Pains 33

Brotherly Love 33

It’s a Trip 33 Take a Moment 33

Movie: kk 'A “First K id"(1996, Comedy) Sinbad, Brock Pierce. 'PG' E

It’s a Trip E Growing Pains E

Mickey-Bean

Walt Disney Presents“ Disneyland Story" (R) E

Zorro (InStereo) E

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Movie: kk 'A “Kidnapped" 1 (1960) James MacArthur. 1

HBO(4:00) Movie Movie: * ★ * * "Close Encounters of the Third Kind" (1977) Richard

Dreyfuss. A lineman’s obsession with UFOs leads him to Wyoming. 33Movie: * * * “Always Outnumbered" (1998, Drama) An I ex-con tries to reform his life on the streets of L.A. 33 |

Oz “The Routine” (R) (In Stereo) E

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Movie: k'A "Turbulence" (1997, Suspense) Ray Liotta. (In Stereo) ‘R’ E

"Addicted to I Love” (1997) I

MAX(4:30) Movie: k k '/ i "The Phantom" (1996) 'PG' 33 |

Movie: k'A “Vegas Vacation" (1997) The Griswold clan embarks on yet another outrageous outing. ‘PG’ 33

Movie: kkk 'A "Aliens" (1986, Science Fiction) Sigourney Weaver. A task force goes to eradicate a hideous space species. ‘R’ 33

Movie: "The Heist" (1996) A hostage crisis erupts during a robbery attempt.

Movie: *★ "2 Days in the Valley" (1996) Danny Aiello. 1 A hit man takes an art dealer and his assistant hostage. 1

SHO(4:45) Movie: ★ ** “Music Box" ( 1989) Jessica Lange. An attorney's father is charged with Nazi war crimes.

Movie: -k-k'A “In His Father's Shoes" (1997) Magic shoes bring a child closer to his deceased father. ’PG’

Movie: “More Tales of the City" (1998, Drama) (Part 2 of 2) Laura Linney. The continuing adventures of the residents of Barbary Lane.

Poltergeist: The Legacy ITaking on evil. (In Stereo)

Movie: “Ringer" (1996) A call girl and a jaded detective must evade a stalker.

TMCMovie: * * * “GoldenEye" (1995) James Bond enters Russia to retrieve stolen weapon codes. 'PG-13' 33

Movie: kk'A "Groundhog Day" (1993) Bill Murray. A TV weatherman is trapped in a Feb. 2 time warp. ’PG’

Movie: * * ★ "Ferris Bueller’s Day Off" (1986) Matthew Broderick. ‘PG-13’

Movie: * * “Midnight Blue" (1997) Damian Chapa. A businessman’s life is shattered by an alluring temptress.

Movie: kk 'A “Single White Female" (1992, Suspense) Bridget Fonda. ‘R’ E

TUESDAY MORNING/AFTERNOON JUNE 9,1998 |

8:00 8:30 9:00 I 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 I 4:00 4:30m m m

FOX 0 (6:00) News Forgive or Forget ffl Geraldo Rivera ffl Real TV ff l [Real TV 3® News Pictionary Hollywood | Extra ffl Geraldo Rivera ffl Ricki Lake Rosie O’Donnell (R) fflNBC O (7:00) Today (In Stereo) 30 Maury ffl Jerry Springer ffl Jenny Jones (In Stereo) News!® Jeopardy! Days of Our Lives ffl Another World ffl Montel Williams (R) ffl Sally fflABC & Good Morning America Regis & Kathie Martha Gayle King People’s Court (In Stereo) News Pt. Charles All My Children ffl One Life to Live ffl General Hospital ffl Oprah Winfrey fflCBC O (7:00) CBC Morning News Playground |SesamePk Theodore Mr. Dressup Wimzie [Lead ffl Midday ffl Encore to Pamela Wallin E.N.G ffl Coronat’n Urban P. Jonovision The BillWB 6D Mask JonQuest Medicine Woman 700 Club In the Heat of the Night 3’s Co. Hillbillies Hawaii Five-0 “Cocoon" Bananas X-Men ffl BugsDaffy Animaniacs PinkyBrain BatmanUPN @D Wacky Bobby Life-Louie |Step-Step Spoons Blossom ffl Sunset Beach ffl All-Family Jeffersons Sanford Happening!! Mr. Cooper Dinosaurs Metallix Spider-Man Turtles RangersPBS © Magic Bus Puzzle Sesame Street (R) ffl Barney Mr Rogers Charlie |Wimzies Teletubbies Sesame Street (R) ffl Reading Barney Couch A rth u r® Magic Bus Sandiego WishboneCBS © (7:00) This Morning 0® Quincy Guiding Light (In Stereo) Price Is Right ffl Debt Young and the Restless Bold & B. As the World Turns ffl Judge Judy Judge Judy Newlywed Dating

A&E McCloud “Murder Arena” |Banacek “The Vanishing Chalice" | Quincy | Northern Exposure® Law & Order ffl |McCloud “Murder Arena” Banacek “The Vanishing Chalice"AMC (6:05) Movie |Movie: ★★★V2 "Hell’s Angels"(1930, Adventure) Ben Lyon, Jean Harlow. ‘PG’ |Movie: ★★★ “Barbed Wire"( 1927) Movie: ★★★ “Wings” (1927, Drama) Clara Bow. Movie: ★★ “Pin Up Girl" (1944, Comedy)BET John A. Cherry Video Vibrations Jam Zone (jam Zone Planet Groove (R) | Rap City

3RAVO Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. | Paid Prog. | Paid Prog. | Paid Prog. Movie: ★★★ “Memoirs of a River" (1989) Sandor Gaspar. ‘NR’ "No Maps on My Taps” Foot Notes Arts | “The Adventures of Baron Munchausen" ICOM Dr. Katz Daily Show Movie: ★ ★ '/2 "Almost You" (1984) Brooke Adams. Saturday Night Live ffl Kids in Hall | Ben Stein Daily Show Dr. Katz Odd Couple Make-Laugh Saturday Night Live ffl Movie: “The Scout" (1994)DISC Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Assignment Discovery Home Matters (R) Housesmart! (R) Interior Motives (R) Home Matters (R) Housesmart! (R) Interior Motives (R) Great Chefs | Great Chefs

E! One Day One Day Kate & Allie [Gossip (R) Bob Crne-True Scandals | Fashion Model TV | Fashion File News Daily Gossip (R) Talk Soup Attractions One Day Kate & Allie Melrose Place (In Stereo)ESPN Sportscenter (R) Sportscenter (R) Sportscenter (R) Sportscenter (R) Sportscenter (R) Survival X-Games Trials (R) X-Games Trials (R) Running (R) X-Games TrialsFAM Rescue 911 (In Stereo)!® Christy "The Hostage” ffl 700 Club Burnett Diagnosis Murder ffl Home & Family (In Stereo) |ShopDrop Shopping Big Valley “The Secret"FSD Fit TV Body Waves Paid Prog. | Paid Prog. Paid Prog. | Paid Prog. | Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Last Word | Sports Auto Racing: FIA Formula One -- Canadian Grand Prix. (R) Cycle World |CARTHIST Classroom: Revolution History Showcase (R) Movie: "Then There Were Giants” (1994, Drama) Real West Secret Service (R) Vietnam: 10,000 Day War |Movie: “Then There Were Giants"(1994, Drama)LIFE Baby Kids These Sisters “Falling Leaves" L.A. Law ffl Thirtysomething ffl Night Court Attitudes Unsolved Mysteries Movie: "Love, Lies and Lullabies" (1993) Susan Dey. Designing Designing 1NICK CharlieB Rugrats ffl Little Bear |BluesClues Busy World |Muppets Wubbulous [Gullah Little Bear BluesClues Allegra Rupert Muppets Looney CharlieB | Doug ffl Garfield GarfieldSCIFI Voyage to Bottom of Sea Lost in Space ffl Land of the Giants Incredible Hulk Twilight Zone ffl Gallery Bradbury Swamp Odyssey ffl Lost in Space ffl Battlestar GalacticaTBS Gilligan 3’s Co. Little House Little House Mama Mama Matlock “The Verdict” ffl Movie: ★★ “Club Paradise" (1986) Robin Williams. Flintstones Flintstones Looney DreamsTLC Skinnmrk Pappyland Big Garage |Bingo Salty’s | Skinnmrk NCTACritc Critters Work in Progress (R) Onlnside |Great Inns Inntimate jlnntimate Wedding Wedding Furniture Hometime 1TNT CHiPs “ High Explosive" CHiPs Starsky and Hutch Spenser: For Hire Movie: ★★★ “Starting Over" (1979) Burt Reynolds. Movie: *★ “Land Raiders"(1969) Telly Savalas. In the Heat of the NightUSA Moment Facts-Life Gimme B. Strangers Wings!® Wings ffl Major Dad Major Dad Movie: ★★ "Prey of the Chameleon" (1992, Suspense) Movie: ★★'/£ “Back to School" (1986, Comedy) ffl Baywatch (In Stereo) fflDISN Goof Troop Mickey Mermaid Pooh Bear Otter Chip-Dale Madeline Mermaid |Pooh Jungle |Tale Spin ffl Donald |Chip-Dale Tale Spin ffl Goof Troop Timon |Aladdin fflHBO "Once Upon a Forest" ‘G’ Movie: ★*★ "Men in Black" (1997) Tommy Lee Jones. Movie: ★★★ “Dominick and Eugene" (1988) ‘PG-13’ ffl Movie: ★★★ “Country" (1984) Jessica Lange. ‘PG’ MenBlack Movie: ★★ “Father Hood" (1993) ‘PG-13’ |MAX (7:00) Movie Movie: -k-k'h "Meatballs" ( 1979) Bill Murray. ‘PG’ ffl Movie: “You’re Never Too Young” (1955) |Movie: ★* “The Evening Star” (1996) Shirley MacLaine. ‘PG-13'ffl Movie: ★★★ “Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country" \ “Just One" 1SHO Busy World Busy World Busy World |Busy World [Busy World Busy World |Busy World |Movie: ★★ “ The Mugger"(1958) |Movie: ★Vi “Modern Problems"(1981) Movie: ★★* “The Purple Rose of Cairo" Movie: *★'/2 "Top Secre//” |TMC (7:20) Movie: "Looking" Movie: “Who’s Harry Crumb?" (1989) ffl Movie: ★★% "Shirley Valentine"(1989) Pauline Collins. |Movie: ★★★ “Movie Movie"(1978) George C. Scott. Movie: ★Vi “Joe’s Apartment"(1996) ffl “And Now for Something" 1

| TUESDAY EVENING JUNE 9, 1998 |

5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 1:00 1:30

©FO X

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Star Trek: The Next Generation “The Outcast"

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Mad About You ffl

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A & EQuincy “By the Death of a Child"

Northern Exposure “Mr. Sandman” ffl

Law & Order “Happily Ever After” ffl

Biography “Tennessee Williams"

Touch of Frost “No Refuge" Frost’s case turns complicated after a witness goes into hiding. (R)

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Biography “Tennessee Williams” (R)

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Movie: ★ ★ ★ ’/2 “ The Black Swan” (1942, Adventure) Tyrone Power.

Movie: "The Night of the Grizzly" (1966) A lawman- turned-rancher is threatened by a marauding bear. ‘G’

After Sunset-Life & Times of the Drive-In

Movie: “Pajama Party"(1964) A martian scout falls in love with an earthling.

Movie: ★★% "The Haunted Palace" (1963, Horror) Vincent Price.

B E T (4:30) Rap City 227!® | Hit List Teen Summit: Making It |Planet Groove Comicview BET Tonight |227 ffl Midnight Love

B R A V O(3:30) Movie: “Adventures- Munchausen"

Movie: ★★* "The Devil and Daniel Webster" (1941) Daniel Webster defends a farmer in a court of hell.

Movie: ★★★V2 “House of Games" (1987) Twist-laden tale of a psychiatrist and an ingenious con man. ‘R’

Movie: ★★★V2 “The Adventures of Baron Munchausen" (1989) John Neville. The fictional nobleman regales an audience with his exploits.

Movie: ★ ★ ★ ' /2 "House of Games" (1987, Drama) Lindsay Crouse. ‘R’

C O M D Y(4:00) Movie: ★★ "The Scout" (1994)

Odd Couple Make Me Laugh

Daily Show(R)

Stein’sMoney

Movie: ★★ “The Scouf” (1994) Albert Brooks. A baseball scout discovers a talented but troubled player.

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D ISCTravelers “Minneapolis"(R)

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Gimme Shelter (R) Wild Discovery: “Giant Otter" (R)

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Justice Files “ Kidnapped"(R)

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New Detectives “Deadly I Target" (R) j

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News Daily Gossip Gilda Radner: The True Hollywood Story A profile of comic Gilda Radner, who succumbed to cancer in 1989.

Talk Soup(R)

Night Stand HowardStern

Howard Stern (R)

Melrose Place “Grand Delusions" (In Stereo)

Talk Soup

(R)

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ESPNNBA Finals Films

NBA Today Up Close Sportscenter Outside the Lines Bodybuilding: 1997 Mr. Olympia. From New York.

Fitness America Pageant(R)

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Sportscenter ffl Baseball Tonight World Cup Eve

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Movie: “Dog's Best Friend" (1997) Richard Mulligan. A boy discovers he can communicate with animals, ffl

Diagnosis Murder "Mind Over Murder” (In Stereo)

Hawaii Five-0 “ Is This Any Way to Run a Paradise?"

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H ISTReal West “The Donner Party”

Secret Service (R) (Part 1 of 4)

Vietnam “The 10,000 Day War" "Firepower” (R)

Secrets of the Rosetta Stone (R)

Rockets! (R) (Part 2 of 4)ffl

Great Ships "The Freighters" (R)

Civil War Journal (R) Secrets of the Rosetta Stone (R)

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L IFEGolden Girls!®

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Debt Intimate Portrait “ Heather Locklear” (R) (In Stereo) ffl

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Homicide:Life

N IC KYou Afraid? Rocko’s

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Happy Days Bewitched 1 Love Lucyffl

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SC IFI Six Million Dollar Man Quantum Leap (In Stereo) Seaquest 2032 (In Stereo) Sightings ffl Godzilla Movie: ★★ “The Beast" (1996) William Petersen. Seaquest 2032 (In Stereo) Sightings ffl Godzilla Movie: “The Seasf” (1996) 1

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Movie: ★★★ “The Blues Brothers" (1980, Comedy) John Belushi, Dan Aykroyd. Two I musicians reassemble their band for a fund-raiser. Time Approximate.

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TN TKung Fu: The Legend Continues “ Redemption"

Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman

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Movie: ★ ★ ’/2 “The Jerk" (1979, Comedy) Steve Martin. An incredibly stupid man stumbles into good fortune.

Movie: ★★★ “Saturday Night Fever" (1977, Drama) John Travolta. A man's only escape from his humdrum existence is dancing.

Movie: “The Jerk" (1979) An incredibly 1 stupid man stumbles into good fortune.

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Walker, Texas Ranger“War Zone” ffl

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Silk Stalkings “Tricks of the Trade" (In Stereo) ffl

Highlander: The Series“Justice” (In Stereo) ffl

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Growing Pains ffl

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Movie: ★★ “Pippi Longstocking" (1997, Adventure) Voices of Melissa Altro. ‘G’ ffl

Movie: ★★Vi “Cats Don’t Dance” (1997, Musical) Voices of Scott Bakula. ‘G’ ffl

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Movie: ★ ★ ★ ’/2 “Treasure Island" (1950) ‘G’ ffl

H B OMovie: ★★ "The In Crowd" (1988, Drama) A teen-ager becomes a performer on a local TV dance show. ‘PG’

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Movie: “Phoenix" (1998, Drama) Ray Liotta. Three corrupt cops get caught up in a gambling scheme. ‘R’ ffl

M A X(4:30) Movie: ★★!6 “Just One of the Guys" (1985)

Movie: ★★★ “My Girl" (1991) A funeral director’s daughter has a summer of awakenings. ‘PG’ ffl

Movie: ★★★ "La Bamba" (1987) A fact-based account of Ritchie Valens' (1941-59) career. ‘PG-13’ ffl

Movie: ★★V2 “Murder at 1600" (1997) Wesley Snipes. The president’s son is implicated in a secretary's death.

Movie: ★ "Forbidden Passions" (1996, Adult) Debra Beatty. (In Stereo) ‘NR’

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Comedy) Richard Mulligan. ‘PG’ fflMovie: ★ ★ '/2 "Heck's Way Home"(1995, Adventure) Michael Riley. ‘G’ ffl

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Movie: “Traveller" (1997) A con artist takes a young protege under his wing. ‘R’

Movie: ★★★★ “Dead Man Walking" (1995, Drama) Susan Sarandon. A nun befriends a death row inmate during his final days. ‘R’ ffl

Movie: ★ “Me & Him" (1988) Griffin Dunne. ‘R’

| WEDNESDAY MORNING/AFTERNOON JUNE 10,1998

8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 I

FOX 0 (6:00) News Forgive or Forget ® Geraldo Rivera ® Real T V ® |Real T V ® News Pictionary Hollywood | Extra ffl Geraldo Rivera ffl Ricki Lake Rosie O’Donnell fflNBC O (7:00) Today (In Stereo) ffl Maury ® Jerry Springer (R) SB Jenny Jones (In Stereo) News ® Jeopardy! Days of Our Lives ffl Another World ffl Montel Williams (R) ffl Sally fflABC o Good Morning America Regis & Kathie Martha Gayle King People’s Court (In Stereo) News Pt. Charles All My Children ffl One Life to Live ffl General Hos >ital ffl Oprah Winfrey ffl

CBC 0 (7:00) CBC Morning News Playground |SesamePk Theodore Mr. Dressup Wimzie [Lead® Midday ® Encore to Pamela Wallin E.N.G“ Legacy” ffl Coronat’n Urban P. Jonovision The Bill

WB fO Mask JonQuest Medicine Woman 700 Club In the Heat of the Night 3’s Co. Hillbillies Hawaii Five-0 Bananas X-Men ffl BugsDaffy Animaniacs PinkyBrain Batman

UPN Wacky Bobby Lif e-Louie |Step-Step Spoons Blossom ® Sunset Beach ® All-Family Jeffersons Sanford Happening!! Mr. Cooper Dinosaurs Metallix Spider-Man Turtles Rangers

PBS m Magic Bus Puzzle Sesame Street (R) ® Barney Mr Rogers Charlie |Wimzies Teletubbies Sesame Street (R) ® Reading Barney Couch A rthu r® Magic Bus Sandiego Wishbone

CBS © (7:00) This Morning 33 Quincy Guiding Light (In Stereo) Price Is Right ffl Debt Young and the Restless Bold & B. As the World Turns® Judge Judy Judge Judy Newlywed Dating

A&E McCloud "The Man With the Golden Hat" |Equalizer (Part 1 of 2) |Quincy “Never a Child” | Northern Exposure® |Law& Order “Virtue" SB | McCloud “The Man With the Golden Hat” | Equalizer (Part 1 of 2) |

AMC (7:35) Movie: “Virgin” M o v ie :* * * “Maid of Salem" {1937) (Movie: * * ’/2 “My Favorite Spy"(1951) Bob Hope. |M o v ie :* * * * “The SpiritofSt. Louis" (1957) James Stewart. |M o v ie :* * * * “A Star Is Bom" (1954) Judy Garland.

BET Facts Popoff Video Vibrations Jam Zone |Jam Zone Planet Groove (R) | Rap City

3RAVO Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. |Paid Prog. | Paid Prog. |Paid Prog. Movie: * * * “The Devil and Daniel Webster" ( ]94t) Movie: * * “Fall Time" (1995, Drama) ‘R’ Foot Notes Movie: * * * ’72 "House of Games" (1987, Drama) ‘R’

COM Dr. Katz Daily Show Movie: ★ * “Ishtar" (1987, Comedy) Warren Beatty. Saturday Night Live ® Kids in Hall [Ben Stein Daily Show | Dr. Katz Odd Couple Make-Laugh Saturday Night Live ffl Movie: *★ "Ishtar" (1987)

DISC Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Assignment Discovery Home Matters (R) Housesmart! (R) Interior Motives (R) Home Matters (R) Housesmart! (R) Interior Motives (R) Great Chefs [Great Chefs

E! One Day One Day Kate & Allie (Gossip (R) Gilda Radner: The True Hollywood Story (R) Model (R) [Fashion News Daily Gossip (R) Talk Soup Model TV One Day | Kate & Allie Melrose Place (In Stereo)

ESPN Sportscenter (R) Sportscenter (R) Sportscenter (R) | World Cup World Cup Soccer: Brazil vs. Scotland. (Live) Survival Racehorse World Cup World Cup Soccer: Morocco vs. Norway. (Live)

FAM Rescue 911 (In Stereo)® Christy (In Stereo) ® 700 Club Burnett Diagnosis Murder ® Home & Family (In Stereo) ShopDrop | Shopping Big Valley

FSD Fit TV Body Waves Paid Prog. [Paid Prog. Paid Prog. | Paid Prog. | Red Wings Last Word NHL-Shots Major League Baseball: Houston Astros at Detroit Tigers. (R) Goin’ Deep (R)

HIST Classroom: Revolution History Showcase (R) Mountbatten: The Last Viceroy Real West Secret Service (R) War Years |Mountbatten: The Last Viceroy

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SCIFI Voyage to Bottom of Sea Lost in Space ® Land of the Giants Incredible Hulk Twilight Zone “Miniature” Gallery Bradbury Swamp Odyssey ffl Lost in Space ffl Battlestar Galactica

TBS Gilligan 3’s Co. Little House Little House Mama Mama Matlock “Deadly Dose" ® Movie: * * * “The Blues Brothers" {1950, Comedy) John Belushi. Flintstones Looney Dreams

TLC Skinnmrk Pappyland Big Garage [Bingo Salty's | Skinnmrk Critters Critters Work in Progress (R) Onlnside | Great Inns Inntimate [inntimate [Wedding Wedding Furniture Hometime |

TNT CHiPs “ High Times" CHiPs “ Flare Up" Charlie’s Angels Spenser: For Hire Movie: * “The Seduction" (1982) Morgan Fairchild. Movie: * *★ “Apache" {1S4, Western) Burt Lancaster. In the Heat of the Night

USA Facts-Life Facts-Life Gimme B. Strangers W ings® Wings ® Major Dad Major Dad Movie: ★* “A Vow to Kill"( 1995) Julianne Phillips. H Movie: ★* “ The Rosary Murders" (1987, Drama) Baywatch “Big Monday”

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HBO Movie: “The Midas Touch" 0997) ‘PG’ Movie: * * * “Independence Day" (1996) Will Smith. 'PG-13' ® Movie: * * * “Romeo & Juliet” (1996, Drama) ‘PG-13’ Movie: “Can’t Buy Me Love" (1987) Movie: * * * “The Secret Garden” (1993) |

MAX (7:00) Movie: "Up Periscp" Movie: * * “Crossworlds" (1996) ‘PG-13’ M o v ie :* * * ‘Tempesf” (1982) John Cassavetes. ‘PG’ |M o v ie :** "The Watcher in the Woods" |M o v ie :** “Dear God" (1996) Greg Kinnear. ‘PG’ ® \ “ ToGillian" 1

SHO Busy World Busy World Busy World |Busy World Busy World Busy World |Busy World |Busy World |Movie: * * “Ruby Jean and Joe" {1996) |Movie: * *★ “Metropolitan" (1990) Carolyn Farina. |Movie: **V i2 "Side Out" (1990) ‘PG-13’ 1

TMC (7:20) Movie Movie: “The Three Faces of Eve” (1957) Movie: * * “Wind"( 1992, Adventure) Matthew Modine. ‘PG-13’ ® |Movie: * * ' / 2 “The Razor’s Edge” (1984) Bill Murray. |Movie: * * "Moonshine Highway" (1996) |Movie: “Welcome Home" \

| WEDNESDAY EVENING JUNE 10,1998 |

5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 1:00 1:30 |

©FO X

News News News Married...With

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No Price Too High (Part 5 of 6)

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©W B

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Sentinel “Prisoner X" (R) (In Stereo) ®

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©C B S

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Movie: * ★ * "Leave Her to Heaven" (1945) A jealous woman adopts a murderous way to seek attention.

Movie: * * * “At Capone" (1959, Biography) Rod Steiger, Fay Spain.

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B R A V OProfiles “Valery Gergiev"(R)

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Expose “Naked Hollywood" “The Writer"

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C O M D Y(4:00) Movie: * * “Ishtar" (1987) Warren Beatty.

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Howard Stern (R)

Melrose Place “Non- Sexual Healing” (In Stereo)

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Movie: * * ' / 2 “Captains Courageous” (1996) Fishermen rescue a spoiled boy and teach him about life. ®

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Hawaii Five-0 “Bait Once, Bait Twice" ffl

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FSD Xtreme Last Word Sports Tigers Major League Baseball: Houston Astros at Detroit Tigers. From Tiger Stadium. FOX Sports News FOX Sports News Last Word [Sports Major League Baseball

H ISTThe Last Viceroy

Real West Secret Service (R) (Part 2 of 4)

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Nazi Bomb Rockets! (R) (Part 3 of 4) ®

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Nazi Bomb (R) Rockets! (R) (Part 3 of 4)ffl

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Golden Girls ®

Supermar­ket Sweep

Debt Intimate Portrait "Debbie Allen” (R) (In Stereo) ®

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Movie: * ★ * ’/2 “National Lampoon's Animal House" (1978) John Belushi. Delta House members try to save their repulsive fraternity.

Movie: * * * “Trading Places" (1983, Comedy) Eddie Murphy, Dan Aykroyd. Two men’s lives are altered by a bet made between tycoons.

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TLC Hometime HomeSvy Renovation Renovation Home Again Home Again Wonders | Warning Secret World [On Active Duty (R) Wonders Warning | Secret World On Active Duty (R)

TN TKung Fu: The Legend Continues “Redemption”

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Walker, Texas Ranger“War Zone” ®

Movie: "Bloodhounds II" (1996) Corbin Bernsen. An author and a martial artist track a vindictive husband. ®

Silk Stalkings “Kill Shot" (R) (In Stereo) ffl

Highlander: The Series“Deadly Exposure" ffl

Big Easy “ Heavenly Body” (R) (In Stereo) ffl

D ISNDinosaursSB

Growing Pains ®

Growing Pains ®

BrotherlyLove®

Movie: * * ' / 2 “Homeward Bound Hr Lost in San Francisco" (1996) Robert Hays. ®

Movie: * * “Father and Scout" (1994, Comedy-Drama) Bob Saget. A boy and his unathletic dad go on a camping trip. ‘PG’ ®

Movie: * * “The Wacky Zoo of Morgan City" (1970)

Zorro (InStereo) ffl

Mickey Mouse Club

Movie: “The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes'"G’ ffl

H B O(3:45) Movie Chimps: So

Like Us SBMovie: * ★ * “Daffy Duck's Quackbusters" (1988, Comedy) ‘G’ SB

DoctorDolittle

Movie: “Buddy" (1997) A 1920s socialite raises a baby gorilla as a human child. ®

Sex and the City (R) ffl

Oz "God’s Chillin’’ (R) (In Stereo) ffl

Movie: “Anaconda" (1997) A huge snake stalks a film crew in the Brazilian jungle.

Movie: * * * “A Bright Shining Lie"(1998, Drama) Bill Paxton, Amy Madigan. 1

M A X(4:30) Movie: "To Gillian on Her 37th Birthday" ®

Movie: * * “Rough Magic"(t995) Bridget Fonda. A magician's assistant searches for an ancient shaman.

Movie: * * ’/2 “Single White Female” (1992) A woman I develops a deadly fixation on her female roommate. ‘R’

Movie: * * “One Man's Justice" (1995) Brian Bosworth. An Army officer goes gunning for his family’s killers. ‘R’

Movie: “Stonewall" 1995) A gay man gets caught up in the 1969 Stonewall riot.

Movie: “The Fiance" ‘R’

SH OMovie: * * “Like Father, Like Son" (1987) A surgeon swaps personalities with his teen-age son. 'PG-13'

| Movie: * * “The Legend of Gator Face" (1996, Adventure) Johnny White. ‘PG’

| Friend’s Wed.

Movie: * * "Ghosts of Mississippi" (1996, Drama) Alec Baldwin. A prosecutor reopens the case against Medgar Evers’ killer. ‘PG-13’ ®

Dead Man's |Gun (R) ffl

Movie: * * “Moving Target" (1996, Drama) Michael Dudikoff. (In Stereo) 'R'

Movie: “Ted and Venus"

TM C(4:05) Movie Movie: * * ’/i “ Two Bits” {1995, Drama)

Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio. ’PG-13’ SBMovie: * * * “Jack <S Sarah" (1995) A widower finds the perfect nanny in an unskilled waitress. (In Stereo) ‘R’

Movie: “The Windsor Protocol" John Colicos, Alan Thicke. (In Stereo) ‘R’

Movie: * * * 1/2 “The Shining” (1980, Horror) Jack Nicholson, Shelley Duvall. A haunted hotel affects a couple and their psychic child. ‘R’

Movie: * * * “The Accused” (1988) ‘R’

THURSDAY MORNING/AFTERNOON JUNE 11,1998

8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30

FOX 0 (6:00 ) News Forgive or Forget SB Geraldo Rivera SB Real T V ® | Real T V ® News Pictionary Hollywood |Extra® Geraldo Rivera SB Ricki Lake (R) Rosie O’Donnell ( R ) ®NBC O (7:00 ) Today (In S tereo ) ® M aury® Jerry Springer SB Jenny Jones (In S tereo) News SB Jeopardy! Days of Our Lives SB Another World SB Montel Williams (R) ® S a lly®ABC o Good Morning America Regis & Kathie Martha Gayle King People’s Court (In S tereo) News Pt. Charles All My Children ® One Life to Live SB General Hospital SB Oprah Winfrey ®CBC 0 (7:00 ) CBC Morning News Playground |SesamePk Theodore Mr. Dressup Wimzie [ Lead ® Midday SB Encore to Pamela Wallin E.N.G ® Coronat’n Urban P. Jonovision The BillWB 0 ) Mask JonQuest Medicine Woman 700 Club In the Heat of the Night 3’s Co. Hillbillies Hawaii Five-0 Bananas X-Men SB BugsDaffy Animaniacs PinkyBrain BatmanUPN © Wacky Bobby Life-Louie |Step-Step Spoons Blossom ® Sunset Beach ® All-Family Jeffersons Sanford Happening!! Mr. Cooper Dinosaurs Metallix Spider-Man Turtles RangersPBS S3 Magic Bus Puzzle Sesame Street (R) SB Barney Mr Rogers Charlie [Wimzies Teletubbies Sesame Street (R) BE Reading Barney Couch Arthur SB Magic Bus Sandiego WishboneCBS © (7:00) This Morning SB Quincy Guiding Light (In S tereo) Price Is Right BE Debt Young and the Restless Bold & B. As the World Turns® Judge Judy Judge Judy Newlywed Dating

A&E Columbo “ N ow Y ou See H im " |Cosby Mysteries |Q u in c y “ H o t lc e ” |Northern Exposure SB | Law & Order “ P riv ileg ed ” |Columbo “ N ow Y ou See H im ” |Cosby MysteriesAMC (7:30) Movie: “Welcome Stranger" |Movie: ★ * * “Tales of Manhattan" (1942, C om edy) [Movie: “Mr. Deeds Goes to T ow n” (1936) |Movie: “The Snows of Kilimanjaro" (1952, D ram a) |Movie: ★ *★ '/2 “Oklahoma!" (1955) ‘G ’ |BET World Vision Video Vibrations Jam Zone |Jam Zone Planet Groove (R) | Rap City

3RAVO Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. | Paid Prog. | Paid Prog. | Paid Prog. Movie: * * * “The Elusive Pimpernel" (1950) Movie: k k 'h "Waterland" (1992) ‘R ’ Foot Notes Movie: * * * “The Pirates of Penzance" (1983 ) ‘G ’COM Dr. Katz Daily Show Movie: k k 'h “First Family"(1980 ) Bob N ew hart. Saturday Night Live SB Kids in Hall | Ben Stein Daily Show | Dr. Katz Odd Couple Make-Laugh Saturday Night Live ® Movie: “High Anxiety"DISC Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Assignment Discovery Home Matters (R) Housesmart! (R) Interior Motives (R) Home Matters (R) Housesmart! (R) Interior Motives (R) Great Chefs | Great Chefs

E! One Day One Day Kate & Allie [Gossip (R) Jodie Foster-Profile Playmates of the 1990s Fashion |Model TV News Daily Gossip (R) Talk Soup [Behind One Day [Kate & Allie Melrose Place (In S tereo)ESPN Sportscenter (R) Sportscenter (R) Sportscenter (R) World Cup World Cup Soccer: C h ile vs. Italy. (Live) Hawaiian LPGA Golf: O ldsm o b ile C lass ic -- F irst R ound. (L ive) X-Games Trials (R)FAM Rescue 911 (In S te reo ) SB Christy “ S eco nd S ig h t” SB 700 Club Burnett Diagnosis M urder® Home & Family (In S tereo) [ShopDrop [Shopping Big ValleyFSD Fit TV Body Waves Paid Prog. [Paid Prog. Paid Prog. |Paid Prog. |Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Last Word |ln the Zone Major League Baseball: H ouston A s tros at D e tro it T igers. (R) NBA Action |NHL-ShotsHIST Classroom: R e vo lu tion History Showcase (R) Movie: k k 'h "Lion of the Desert" (1981, D ram a) Anthon Q uinn, O live r Reed. Secret Service (R) Air Combat |Movie: kk 'h “Lion of the Desert" (1981, D ram a)LIFE Baby Kids These Sisters “ S ca n d a lo u s” SB L.A. Law SB Thirtysomething ® Night Court Attitudes Unsolved Mysteries Movie: k k 'h “Penalty Phase" (1986 ) P eter S trauss. Designing DesigningNICK CharlieB Rugrats SB Little Bear |BluesClues Busy World |Muppets Wubbulous [Gullah Little Bear BluesClues Allegra Rupert Muppets Looney CharlieB |D oug® Garfield GarfieldSCIFI Voyage to Bottom of Sea Lost in Space SB Land of the Giants Incredible Hulk Twilight Zone® Gallery Bradbury Swamp Odyssey SB Lost in Space ® Battlestar GalacticaTBS Gilligan 3’s Co. Little House Little House Mama Mama Matlock “ The T a rg e t” ® Movie: k k “Superman IV: The Quest for Peace" (1987) Flintstones Flintstones Looney DreamsTLC Skinnmrk Pappyland Big Garage [Bingo Salty’s |Skinnmrk Critters Critters Work in Progress (R) Onlnside |Great Inns Inntimate [inntimate Wedding Wedding Furniture HometimeTNT CHiPs CHiPs “ T he G am e of W a r" Starsky and Hutch Spenser: For Hire Movie: k k 'h "The Last Challenge" (1967) G lenn Ford. Movie: k k k “Return of the Gunfighter"( 1967) In the Heat of the NightUSA Facts-Life Facts-Life Gimme B. Strangers Wings SB Wings SB Major Dad Major Dad Movie: k 'h "A Passion to Kill" (1994) S cott Bakula. SB Movie: kk 'h “Perfect Alibi" (1994) Teri G arr. SB PGA Golf (In S te reo L ive)DISN Goof Troop Mickey Mermaid Pooh Bear Otter Chip-Dale Madeline Mermaid |Pooh Jungle |Ta leSpin® Donald |Chip-Dale Tale Spin SB |Goof Troop Timon Aladdin ®

HBO Movie: "Once in a Blue Moon"( 1995) Movie: * * * “Twister" (1996) H e len Hunt. ‘P G -13 ’ SB Movie: * * "Framed" (1990) ‘P G -13 ’ SB Movie: kk 'h “Hero"(1992) D ustin H offm an. ‘P G -1 3 ’ SB Movie: k k “Changing Habits" (1997) “Beniker"MAX Movie: * * * "The Enemy Below" (1957, A dve nture ) Movie: k k “Love Potion No. 9" (1992) SB Movie: k k 'h “Coyote S um m e r” (1996) Movie: kk 'h "Protocol" (1984) ‘P G ’ SB |Movie: k k k k “A Little Princess" (1995 ) E le an or Bron . | “Police 4”SHO Busy World | Busy World Busy World | Busy World Busy World |Busy World Busy World Movie: k k 'h “Take Her, She’s Mine"[ 1963, C om edy) |Movie: k k k "The Hudsucker Proxy” (1994) ‘P G ’ SB Movie: “Whiskers" (1997) M ich ae l C a loz.TMC (7:00 ) Movie: “True Grit" Movie: k k 'h "Runaway" (1984) Tom S elleck. ‘P G -13 ’ Movie: kk 'h "Matilda"(1978) ‘G ’ |Movie: k 'h “Daddy’s Girl"(1996) ‘R ’ SB |Movie: k k “Rustlers' Rhapsody” (1985) Movie: k k 'h “Gunfighter’s Moon" [ 1996)

| THURSDAY EVENING JUNE 11,1998

5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 1:00 1:30 |

0FO X

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World’s Wildest Police Videos (In S tereo) (PA) ®

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News Cheers ® Magic Hour (In S tereo ) SB Married...With

M*A‘ S*H ® Who’s the Boss? ®

oN B C

News SB News SB NBC Nightly News SB

Wheel of Fortune ®

Jeopardy!®

Friends (InS tereo) SB

Veronica’s Closet SB

Seinfeld (InS tereo) BE

Just ShootMe (R) ®

ER “ G ood Touch, Bad T o u ch ” (R) (In S tereo) SB

News SB Tonight Show (In S tereo)ffi

Jenny Jones S urp rise w e dd ing p roposa ls . (R) ®

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oA B C

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Ent. Tonight C-16 “ R uss ian R o u le tte ” (In S tereo) SB

Prey “ C o lla bo ra tion ” (In S tereo) SB

Thursday Night (InS tereo) SB

News Nightline ® Inside Edition ®

American Journal ®

Politically Incorrect ® |

Ent. Tonight

oC B C

FutureworldSB

News SB CBC News Comics! (R)®

Stanley Cup Playoffs: F ina ls G am e 2 -- T eam s to Be A nnounced . (T im e A pp rox im a te) (Live) SB

National/CBC News SB News ® Movie: *** "Live Bait” (1995) T om S cho lte . An a im less 23 -ye a r-o ld ho oks up w ith an a rtis t in he r 60s. |

0DW B

Full House(In S tereo)

Boy Meets World SB

Family Matters SB

Different World SB

Roseanne®

Mama’sFamily

Hercules: The Legendary Journeys “ E nco un te r” SB

Xena: Warrior Princess“ The Q uill Is M ig h tie r” SB

Roseanne(In S tereo)

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Cops“ L A P D ” ®

LAPD: Life on the Beat

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Simpsons(In S tereo )

Living Single SB

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Movie: k k 'h "The Night We Never Met” (1993) Three peop le share a New Y ork C ity apartm en t in rotation.

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Grace Under Fire

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Seinfeld“ T he T ru th "

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CBS News Hard CopySB

Promised Land "S tea lin g H om e” (R) SB

Diagnosis Murder “ Looks C an K ill" (R) (In S tereo) SB

48 Hours (In S tereo) ® Late Show (In S tereo ) SB Murphy Brown SB

Late Late Show (InS te re o )®

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A & EQuincy “ H ot Ice ” Northern Exposure “ A

Bolt F rom the B lu e” SBLaw & Order “ P riv ileg ed ”SB

Biography “ T rum an C apote : The T iny T e rro r"

American Justice“ M urder: In C o ld B lo od ”

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Law & Order “ P rom ises to K ee p"S B

Biography “ T rum an Capo te : T he T iny T e rro r”

American Justice“ M urder: In C o ld B lo od ”

A M C(3:30 ) Movie: k k k '/ 2

“Oklahoma!" (1955) ‘G’HollywoodBackstage

Movie: ★ * * "Midnight Lace" (1960) A London ne w lyw ed is to rm en te d by th rea te n ing phone calls.

Movie: kk 'h "Smoke Signal" (1955, W estern) D ana Andrew s, P iper Laurie.

Movie: * * * "Parrish" (1961, D ram a) T roy D onahue , C laud e tte C o lbert. Three w om en teach a you ng m an abou t love an d life . SB

Movie: k k 'h "On Moonlight Bay" (1951, M usica l) D o ris D ay, G ordo n M acR ae.

BET (4:30) Rap City 227® |Planet Groove |Hit List Comicview BET Tonight |227® Midnight Love

B R A V OProfiles “ Sou l o f S ta x " (R) Movie: ★ * * “Androcles and the Lion" (1952, C om edy)

A m ee k ta ilo r b e frien ds a w ild lion in anc ien t Rom e.Movie: kk 'h “Waterland” (1992) Jere m y Irons. A h isto ry teach e r reca lls his life through h is teach ings. ‘R ’

Blue Note: A Story of Modern Jazz (P art 2 o f 2)

Movie: * ★ * "A Man of No Importance" (1994) A bus con du c to r w ants to s tage an O sca r W ild e p lay. 'R '

Blue Note: A Story of Modern Jazz (P art 2 of 2) |

C O M D Y(4:00) Movie: k k 'h “High Anxiety" (1977 , C o m edy)

Odd Couple Make Me Laugh

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(R)Stein’sMoney

Movie: k k 'h "High Anxiety" (1977) Mel B rooks. A san ita rium d irec to r uncove rs a plo t to b ilk pa tien ts.

Rowan Atkinson: Not Just Another Pretty Face

Daily Show Stein’sMoney

Saturday Night LiveEdd ie M urphy. SB

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DISCTravelers "S a n Ju a n " (R) Wings “ M E -163: The

K om e t” (R)Gimme Shelter (R) Wild Discovery "P a nda s

-- A G ian t S tirs ” (R)Animal X Movie

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as a w e ap on of terrorism .Wild Discovery “ P andas -- A G ian t S tirs ” (R)

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E!Godzilla Mania (R) Talk Soup Fashion

EmergencyNews Daily Gossip Sex on the Riviera An in s ide r’s look at the “ un offic ia l”

C annes Film F estiva l in sou thern F rance. (R)Talk Soup

(R)Night Stand Howard

SternHoward Stern (R)

Melrose Place “ N o S trings A tta ch e d ” (In S tereo )

Talk Soup(R)

Night Stand

ESPNNBAFantastic

NBA Finals Films: 1993

Up Close Sportscenter Quest for the Cup

Stanley Cup Playoffs: F ina ls G am e 2 - T eam s to Be A nnounced . (Live) SB Sportscenter SB BaseballTonight

X-Games Trials Best o f in­line skating.

ExtremeBloopers

FAMBonanza: The Lost Episodes

CarolBurnett

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Movie: "The Ditchdigger’s Daughters" (1997, D ram a) A po o r m an teach es h is da ug hters to s trive fo r success.

Movie: k k k “The Attic: The Hiding of Anne Frank” (1988, D ram a) M ary S teenburgen, Pau l Scofie ld .

700 Club Bonanza: The Lost Episodes

PaidProgram

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FSD SurfPlanet [Crank (R) Last Word Sports Major League Baseball: N ew Y ork Y an kee s at M ontrea l Expos. (Live) FOX Sports News FOX Sports News Last Word [In the Zone Auto Racing

HIST(3:00) Movie: k k 'h “Lion of the D e s e rf” (1981)

Secret Service (R) (P art 3 o f 4)

Air Combat “ V ie tnam : A M iss ion ”

Alchemy: The Science of Magic (R)

Rockets! (R) (Part 4 of 4)®

History Undercover“ S ecre t A ge n ts "

World at War “ W o lf P ack" Alchemy: The Science of Magic (R)

Rockets! (R) (P art 4 o f 4) I®

LIFEGolden Girls SB

Golden Girls SB

Supermar­ket Sweep

Debt Intimate Portrait“ R ebecca L o b o " SB

WNBA Basketball: New Y ork L iberty a t C leve land R ockers. From the G und A rena. (In S tereoL ive)

WNBA-Diary

NewAttitudes ®

Golden Girls ®

GoldenG irls®

Unsolved Mysteries (InS tereo)

Homicide:Life

N IC KYou Afraid? Rocko’s

Modern LifeFigure It Out

Tiny Toon Adventures

Doug (InS tereo ) SB

Rugrats (InS tereo) SB

Kablam! (InS tereo)

BradyBunch

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Wonder Years SB

Happy Days Bewitched I Love LucySB

Mary Tyler Moore SB

Taxi ® Newhart ® Dick Van Dyke

BobNewhart

SC IFI Six Million Dollar Man Quantum Leap (In S tereo ) Seaquest 2032 “ R e un ion " Sightings (In S tereo) BE Movie: * * “DeepStar Six" (1989) Taurean Blacque. Seaquest 2032 “ R e un ion " Sightings (In S tereo ) SB Movie: ★ * “DeepStar Six" |

TB SSaved by the Bell SB

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Babylon 5 “ A V o ice in the W ild e rn e ss” SB

Movie: * * “Brannigan" (1975, M ystery) John W ayne, Jud y G eeson. A C h icag o po licem an tracks a flee in g fug itive to London.

Movie: k k 'h "The Mackintosh /Wan” (1973, Adve n tu re ) A secre t ag en t's q u a rry is a T ory m em b er of Parliam ent.

Movie: k k k “ The Towering Inferno" (1974, D ra m a) S teve M cQ ueen.

USA(4:00 ) PGA Golf: Bu ick C la ss ic -- F irst R ound.

Baywatch "S h a rks C o ve ” (In S te reo ) SB

Highlander: The Series“ D ead ly E xpo su re ” SB

Walker, Texas Ranger“ H ighe r P ow er" (In S tereo)

Movie: * * * “GoodMorning, Vietnam"(1987, C om edy-D ram a) R obin W illiam s. Based on the exp lo its o f A rm ed Forces DJ A drian C ronauer.

Silk Stalkings “ P artne rs ” (In S tereo ) (P art 1 of 2) SB

Highlander: The Series"T w o of H e arts ” (In S te reo )

La Femme 1 Nikita (R) ® |

DISNDinosaursSB

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Brotherly Love SB

Movie: kk 'h "Pocahontas" (1995, A dve nture ) V o ices o f Irene Bedard. ‘G ’ SB

Movie: * * * “The Preacher’s Wife"(1996) An ange l becom es d raw n to a pa sto r's du lce t-ton ed w ife . ‘P G ’ SB

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Movie: *★ “The Wacky Zoo of Morgan City" (1970)

Zorro “ Z o rro R ides A lo n e "

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Movie: k k 'h “$1,000,000 Duck" (1971, C o m edy) ‘G ’

H B O(4:30) Movie: k k 'h “The Beniker Gang" (1985) ‘G’

Movie: k k k “Twister” (1996) H e len H unt. S torm cha se rs race to tes t a new to rna do -m on ito ring device .

Movie: “The Pentagon Wars" (1998) Kelsey G ram m er. A fau lty ba ttle fie ld veh ic le leaves a co lone l in the lurch.

Oz “ C apita l P " (R) (In S tereo) SB

Innocents Lost (In S tereo ) SB Arliss (InS tereo ) ®

Movie: “Lethal Tender” (1997 ) J e ff Fahey. ‘R ’ GE

M A X(4:30) Movie: “Police Academy 4: Patrol"

Movie: k k 'h “One Fine D a y ” (1996) T w o ove rs tre ssed sing le pa ren ts tip toe a ro un d rom ance . ‘P G ’ SB

Movie: kk 'h “Death on the Nile” (1978, M ystery) P e ter U stinov, Bette Davis. H e rcu le Poirot p robes a m urder aboard a cru ise ship. ‘P G ’

Movie: k k k “ The Terminator" (1984) A cybo rg assassin from the fu tu re com e s to p re sen t-d ay L.A. ‘R ’

Movie: * * * “Rosewood" (1997, D ram a) 1 Jon V o igh t. (In S te reo ) ‘R ’ ®

SH OMovie: * ★ * “Grease" (1978) Joh n T ravo lta . D ispara te sum m e r lo ve rs m ee t aga in as h igh -sch oo l sen io rs . ‘P G ’

[Movie: * * “Salt Water Moose" (1995, C om edy-D ram a) T im o thy D a lton. ‘G ’

| Making- Thanks

|Movie: k k k 'h “Thanks of a Grateful | Nation" (1998, Dram a) M att Keeslar. SB

Movie: k k k 'h “Thanks of a Grateful Nation” (1998, D ram a) M att Keesla r. SB

Thanks: The Real HeroesR eal-life he roes. (R)

Movie: k k 'h| “Caddyshack" (1980) ‘R ’ |

TM CMovie: k k k 'h “ True Grit" (1969, W este rn ) Joh n W ayne , K im Darby. A o n e -e yed m arsh a l and a T e xa s R a ng er a id a ven ge fu l teen . ‘G ’ SB

Movie: *★ “Children of the Corn III: Urban Harvest" (1995) D anie l C erny. ‘R ’

Movie: kk 'h "Bound" (1996) Jen n ife r T illy. An ex-con and he r su ltry ne ig hbo r p lan to rip off the m ob. ‘R ’

Movie: * “Bullet" {1997, D ram a) M ickey R ourke, T upa c Shakur. (In S tereo ) ‘R ’ SB

Movie: k k 'h "Sudden Impact" (1983, D ra m a) C lin t E astw ood , Pat H ing le . ‘R ’ |

FRIDAY MORNING/AFTERNOON JUNE 12,1998 |

8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30

FOX 0 (6:00) News Forgive or Forget ffl Geraldo Rivera ® Real TV ffl | Real TV ffl News Pictionary Hollywood | Extra ffl Geraldo Rivera ffl Ricki Lake Rosie O’Donnell (R )fflNBC O (7:00) Today (In Stereo) ffl Maury HE Jerry Springer® Jenny Jones (In Stereo) News ffl Jeopardy! Days of Our Lives ffl Another World ffl Montel Williams (R) ffl Sally fflABC O Good Morning America Regis & Kathie Martha Gayle King People’s Court (In Stereo) News Pt. Charles All My Children ffl One Life to Live ffl General Hospital ffl Oprah Winfrey fflCBC o (7:00) CBC Morning News Playground |SesamePk Skinnmrk Mr. Dressup Wimzie | Lead ffl Midday ffl Encore to Pamela Wallin E.N.G “Payback” ffl Reflections Urban P. Cents The BillWB SD Mask JonQuest Medicine Woman 700 Club In the Heat of the Night 3’s Co. Hillbillies Hawaii Five-0 Bananas X-Men ffl BugsDaffy Animaniacs PinkyBrain BatmanUPN SD Wacky Bobby Lif e-Louie |Step-Step Spoons Blossom ® Sunset Beach ffl All-Family Jeffersons Sanford Happening!! Mr. Cooper Dinosaurs Metallix Spider-Man Turtles RangersPBS @3 Virtues Puzzle Sesame Street (R) ffl Barney Mr Rogers Charlie |Theodore Teletubbies Sesame Street (R) ffl Reading Barney Couch A rth u r® Magic Bus Sandiego WishboneCBS © (7:00) This Morning ffl Quincy Guiding Light (In Stereo) Price Is Right ffl Debt Young and the Restless Bold & B. As the World Turns ffl Judge Judy Judge Judy Newlywed Dating

A&E McMillan and Wife “The Deadly Cure" Equalizer (Part 2 of 2) |Quincy |Northern Exposure ® |Law & Order “Nurture” ® |McMillan and Wife "The Deadly Cure” |Equalizer (Part 2 of 2)AMC (7:30) Movie Movie: * * ' / 2 "Steel Town" (1952) Movie: * * * * “His Girl Friday" (1940) jMovie: * * * “Detective Story” (1951) Kirk Douglas. |Movie: "Weekend in Havana" (1941) ® |Movie: * * ' / 2 "Seven Sinners” (1940) “Old Man"BET Brkthrgh Eddie Long Video Vibrations Jam Zone . |Jam Zone Planet Groove (R) Rap City

3RAVO Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. |Paid Prog. | Paid Prog. | Paid Prog. Jerry Herman’s Broadway at the Bowl Movie: * * * “A Man of No Importance" (1994) ‘R’ Movie: * * * “JuDou"( 1990) Gong Li. Jerry HermanCOM Dr. Katz Daily Show Movie: * ' / 2 “Armed and Dangerous" (1986, Comedy) Saturday Night Live ffl Kids in Hall Ben Stein Daily Show | Dr. Katz Odd Couple Make-Laugh Saturday Night Live ffl * 1/2 “Once Upon a Crime"DISC Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Assignment Discovery Home Matters (R) Housesmart! (R) Interior Motives (R) Home Matters (R) Housesmart! (R) Interior Motives (R) Great Chefs | Great Chefs

E! One Day One Day Kate & Allie jGossip (R) Celebrity Homes (R) Godzilla Mania (R) Fashion File |Model (R) News Daily |Gossip (R) Talk Soup |Fashion File One Day 1 Kate & Allie Melrose Place (In Stereo)ESPN Sportscenter (R) Sportscenter (R) Sportscenter (R) Sportscenter (R) Sportscenter (R) Equestrian (R) LPGA Golf: Oldsmobile Classic -- Second Round. Golf |GolfFAM Rescue 911 (In Stereo) 35 Christy “The Road Home” 700 Club |Burnett Diagnosis M urder® Home & Family (In Stereo) |ShopDrop |Shopping Big ValleyFSD Fit TV Body Waves Paid Prog. |Paid Prog. Paid Prog. |Paid Prog. |This Is the PGA Tour Last Word |NBA Action NFL Europe Football: Amsterdam Admirals at Scottish Claymores. (R) Pro Sports | BaseballHIST Classroom: Revolution History Showcase (R) Movie: “For Us the Living: The Medgar Evers Story" Real West Secret Service (R) Story of the USS Intrepid | Movie: “For Us the Living: The Medgar Evers Story"LIFE Baby Kids These Sisters (In Stereo) 30 L.A. Law “ Barstow Bound" Thirtysomething ffl Night Court Attitudes Unsolved Mysteries Movie: * * V2 “Jennifer: A Woman’s Story" (1979) Designing Designing 1NICK CharlieB Rugrats ffl Little Bear {BluesClues Busy World |Muppets Wubbulous |Gullah Little Bear BluesClues Allegra Rupert Muppets Looney CharlieB | Doug ffl Garfield GarfieldSCIFI Entertain Amazing Lost in Space 30 Land of the Giants Incredible Hulk Twilight Zone® Gallery In Space Swamp Genesis Lost in Space ffl Movie: * * "Star Quest” ffl ITBS Gilligan 3’s Co. Little House Little House Mama |Mama Matlock “The Assault" ffl Movie: * * 1/ 2 "Superman III" (1983, Fantasy) Christopher Reeve, Richard Pryor. Looney DreamsTLC Skinnmrk Pappyland Big Garage |Bingo Salty’s | Skinnmrk Elementary School (R) Work in Progress (R) Onlnside {Great Inns Inntimate |lnntimate |Wedding |Wedding Furniture Hometime 1TNT CHiPs "Fallout” CHiPs "Dog Gone" Charlie’s Angels Spenser: For Hire Movie: **V4 “The Mackintosh Man" (1973, Adventure) Movie: * ★ * “The Fastest Gun Alive" (1956, Western) In the Heat of the Night 1USA Facts-Life Facts-Life Gimme B. Strangers W ings® Wings ffl Major Dad Movie: *★★ "Outrageous Fortune” (1987) Bette Midler. Movie: * * * "GoodMorning, Vietnam" (1987) Robin Williams, ffl PGA Golf (In Stereo Live) 1DISN Goof Troop Mickey Mermaid Pooh Bear Otter Chip-Dale Madeline {Mermaid iPooh Jungle Tale Spin ffl | Donald Chip-Dale |Tale Spin ff l |Goof Troop Timon Aladdin fflHBO Movie: * * “My Uncle: The Alien” (1996) Movie: "Airplane II: The Sequel" (1982) Movie: * * * “Tucker: The Man and His Dream" (1988) Movie: * * ' / 2 "The Proposition" (1997) Movie: * *V 2 “A Feast at Midnight" (1995) 'PG' ff l “ The Arrival"MAX Movie: * * * ‘‘The Grass Harp" (1995) ffl Movie: * * “The Boy in the Plastic Bubble" (1976) Movie: **'/•> "Our Miss Brooks" (1956) Movie: **V i2 “Wayne’s World2" (1993) Movie: * * “Aspen Extreme" (1992) Paul Gross, ffl "Grease 2"SHO Busy World |Busy World Busy World Busy World | Busy World Busy World | Busy World Movie: ★Vi “RoboCop 3 " (1993) Robert John Burke, ffl Movie: * *V i “The Proposition"(1997) jMovie: “September" (1996, Drama) Jacqueline Bisset. |TMC (7:35) Movie: “Cop-Half" Movie: ★ *V2 “Denise Calls Up” (1995) Movie: * * * * “Hud"( 1963, Drama) Paul Newman, ff l | * * * "The Young Poisoner’s Handbook" |Movie: -k'h “Return to the Blue Lagoon" (1991) ‘PG-13’ | “The City of Lost Children" |

FRIDAY EVENING JUNE 12,1998 |

5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 1:00 1:30

0FO X

News News News Married...With

AccessHollywood

Extra (InStereo)ffl

Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction? (R) (In Stereo) ffl

Millennium “Sacrament" (R) (In Stereo) (PA) ffl

News Cheers ffl Magic Hour (In Stereo) ffl Married...With

M*A*S*H ffl KwikWitz I

oN B C

News SI News 30 NBC Nightly News BE

Wheel of Fortune ®

Jeopardy!ffl

Dateline Tourette’s syndrome. (In Stereo) ffl

NBA Basketball Playoffs: Finals Game 5 -- Utah Jazz at Chicago Bulls or Indiana Pacers. If necessary. (In StereoLive) ffl

News ffl News ffl TonightShow ®

Late Night (In Stereo) ff l I

oA B C

News News ABC Wld News

Ent. Tonight Sabrina-Witch

You Wish(In Stereo)

Boy Meets World (R) ffl

Teen Angel(In Stereo)

20/20 ffl News Nightline ffl Inside Edition ffl

American Journal ffl

Politically Incorrect ff l

I Ent. Tonightl

oC B C

Fashion Files

News ffl CBC News Major League Baseball: Baltimore Orioles at Toronto Blue Jays. From SkyDome. (Live) ®

National/CBC News ffl National Update ffl

News ffl Movie: * * “ The Spy in Black" (1939) In WWI Scotland, 1 a German sub surfaces in the Orkney Islands.

©W B

Full House(In Stereo)

Boy Meets World ffl

Family Matters 30

Different World 3E

Roseanne(In Stereo)

Mama’sFamily

Movie: * * “Rapid Fire" (1992, Adventure) Gangsters stalk a martial artist who witnessed a murder.

Roseanne(In Stereo)

Mama'sFamily

Cops (InStereo) ffl

LAPD: Life on the Beat

HighwayPatrol

StrangeUniverse

American Athlete (InStereo)

©UPN

Simpsons“Lisa on Ice”

Living Single I®

Simpsons(In Stereo)

HomeImprove.

Frasier (InStereo) ffl

HomeImprove.

Major League Baseball: Detroit Tigers at Kansas City Royals. From Kauffman Stadium. (Live)

News Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (R) (In Stereo) ffl

Vibe Fabio; music guest Alejandro Fernandez.

©P B S

Kratts’Creatures

ScienceGuy

Newshour With Jim Lehrer BE

BusinessReport

BackstagePass

WashingtonWeek

Wall Street Week

Movie: * * * “Soldier of Fortune" (1955) A gunrunner must rescue an imprisoned news photographer.

BeingServed

Mr. Bean“ Mr. Bean"

Nova “Treasures of the Sunken City" (In Stereo) ffl

Movie: * * * "Soldier of Fortune” (1955, Adventure)

©C B S

Grace Under Fire

Mad About You ffl

Seinfeld“The Dog”

Mad About You BE

CBS News Hard Copyffl

Kids-Darndest

Candid Camera ffl

Family Matters ffl

Step by Step ffl

Nash Bridges “One Flew Over the Cuda’s Nest" ffl

Late Show (In Stereo) ffl Murphy Brown ffl

Late Late Show (InStereo) ffl

HardCopy Iffl ?

A & EQuincy “Sweet Land of Liberty"

Northern Exposure“Hello, I Love You" BE

Law & Order “ Nurture" ® Biography “Oscar Levant: Brilliant Shadow” (R)

America’s Castles“Savannah”

20th Century “Serial Killers"

Law & Order “Vengeance" ffl

Biography “Oscar Levant: Brilliant Shadow” (R)

America’s Castles“Savannah” (R)

A M C(4:30) Movie: “The Old Man and the Sea” (1958)

HollywoodBackstage

Movie: * * * “Destry Rides Again" (1939, Western) Marlene Dietrich.

Movie: * * * 1/ 2 “Superman II" (1980, Fantasy) Three criminals from Krypton take over the United States. ‘PG’

Movie: “When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth" (1970) A fugitive cave girl befriends a cave man and a dinosaur.

Movie: * * “The Land That Time Forgot" I (1975) Doug McClure. ‘PG’ (Violence)

Movie: *V 2 I“Reptilicus" I

B E T (4:30) Rap City 227 BE | Planet Groove Top 20 | Hit List Comicview | Rap City Message-Music 227 ® |Midnight Love

B R A V O(4:15) Jerry Herman's Broadway at the Bowl (R)

Movie: ★★★V2 “A Kid for Two Farthings” (1956) A lad believes his one-horned goat is a magical unicorn.

Movie: * * “The Last Party" (1993) Robert Downey Jr. attends the 1992 Democratic Convention. ‘R’

Movie: **V i2 "Smoke" (1995) William Hurt. Lives of assorted New Yorkers intersect at a cigar store. ‘R’

Inside the Actors StudioHarvey Keitel. (R)

Movie: * * “The Last Party" (1993) ‘R’ ]

C O M D Y(4:00) Movie: *% “Once Upon a Crime"(1992)

Movie: * * "Delirious" (1991, Comedy) John Candy. A soap writer is swept into the world of his characters.

Movie: *V4 "Armed and Dar An ex-cop and a former law\

igerous" (1986, Comedy) er become security guards.

Movie: * ' / 2 "Once Upon a Crime" (1992) Tourists are hapless suspects in a European murder mystery.

Movie: * * ' / 2 “National Lampoon's Vacation" (1983) A 1 vacationing family detours into screwball side trips.

D ISCTravelers “Philadelphia”(R)

Wings “Hugging the Deck”(R)

Gimme ShelterArchitectural columns. (R)

Wild Discovery “Mother Nature” (R)

DiscoveryNews

StormWarning!

Mysteries of the Unexplained Ghosts. (R)

Justice Files "Why They Kill” (R)

Wild Discovery “Mother Nature" (R)

Discovery { News (R)

StormWarning!

E!Uncut (R) Coming

AttractionsTalk Soup News Weekend Gossip X-Files Premiere Talk Soup (R) Howard

SternHoward Stern (R)

Melrose Place (In Stereo) Talk Soup (R)

ESPNInside Sr. PGA

Inside the PGA Tour

Up Close Sportscenter Louisville Kennel Club Dog Show (R)

Figure Skating: World Championships Gala Exhibition. From Minneapolis. (R)

BaseballTonight

Sportscenter ffl BaseballTonight

PRCA Rodeo: Redding Rodeo.

Timber Series (R)

FA MBonanza: The Lost Episodes “ Bushwacked"

CarolBurnett

CarolBurnett

Movie: * 1/ 2 “ The New Adventures ofPippi Longstocking" (1988, Fantasy) Tami Erin.

Diagnosis Murder“ FMurder" (In Stereo) ffl

Hawaii Five-0 ffl 700 Club Bonanza: The Lost Episodes

PaidProgram

PaidProgram

FSD Spike | Pennant Last Word Sports Preview |To Be Announced jTurner Cup Playoffs: Championship Game 6 -- Detroit Vipers at Chicago Wolves. jSports Sports {Sports Last Word Boxing

H ISTReal West “The Indian Wars: Might Makes Right”

Secret Service (R) (Part 4 of 4)

Fighting 1: The Story of the USS Intrepid (R)

Roman Emperors (R) M o v ie :* * * “The Fall of the Roman Empire" (1964, Drama) Sophia Loren, Stephen Boyd, Alec Guinness. The power-mad son of Marcus Aurelius assumes the throne.

Roman Emperors (R) M o v ie :* * * “The Fall of 1 the Roman Empire" (1964) 1

LIFEGolden Girls S

Golden Girls ffl

Women’s Film Festival Short films by up-and-coming female directors. (R)

Unsolved Mysteries (InStereo)

Movie: * * ' / 2 “The Story Lady" (1991) Jessica Tandy. A retired widow’s local-access children's show is a hit.

NewAttitudes ffl

Golden Girls ffl

Golden Girls ffl

Unsolved Mysteries (InStereo)

Homicide:Life

N IC KYou Afraid? Rocko’s

Modern LifeFigure It Out

Tiny Toon Adventures

Doug (InStereo) ®

Rugrats (InStereo)ffl

Hey Arnold!(In Stereo)

BradyBunch

BradyBunch

Wonder « Years ffl

Happy Days“Motorcycle”

Bewitched I Love Lucyffl

Mary Tyler Moore ffl

Taxi ffl Newhart ffl Dick Van Dyke

BobNewhart

SC IF I (4:00) Movie: "Star Quest" Amazing Entertain Movie: * * * “The Abyss" (1989) Ed Harris. An oil-rig crew is involved in a search for a nuclear sub. ® Movie: “The Abyss" (1989) An oil-rig crew is involved in a search for a nuclear sub. 1

TB SSaved by the Bell S

Saved by the Bell ffl

Family Matters 30

Family Matters 3E

AndyGriffith

Major League Baseball: Montreal Expos at Atlanta Braves. From Turner Field.(Live) ffl

Movie: * * V 2 “Sleeping With the Enemy" (1991) Julia Roberts. A woman takes desperate measures to flee her abusive husband.

Movie: * * "Casual Sex?" (1988) Lea Thompson.

TLC Hometime HomeSvy Renovation Renovation Home Again Home Again Real America: 48 Hours |Secret World-Circuses Explosion! (R) |Real America: 48 Hours Secret World-Circuses Explosion! (R)

TN TKung Fu: The Legend Continues (In Stereo) S

Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman

Babylon 5 “ Babylon Squared" (In Stereo) ®

Movie: *Vi2 “The Secret Agent Club" (1996, Comedy) A secret agent masquerades as the owner of a toy shop.

Movie: “Assault on Devil’s Island" (1997) Commandos must rescue kidnapped gymnasts from drug lords.

Movie: * * “Mr. Nanny" (1993) Terry “Hulk" Hogan. An 1 ex-wrestler becomes a bodyguard for two terrible tykes. 1

USA(4:00) PGA Golf: Buick Classic -- Second Round.

Baywatch Eddie is reunited with his first love.

Highlander: The Series"Two of Hearts" (In Stereo)

Movie: * * * “The Remains of the Day" (1993, Drama) Anthony Hopkins, Emma Thompson. A butler recalls his life at an English lord’s estate. (In Stereo) ffl

Movie: * * * “La Femme Nikita" (1991, Drama) Anne Parillaud. A convicted murderess gets another chance as an assassin, ffl

"Excessive I Force" !

D ISNDinosaursffl

Growing Pains ff l

Growing Pains BE

BrotherlyLove®

Movie: “That Darn Cat"(1997) A feisty feline holds the key to a kidnapping case.

M o v ie :** “BlankCheck” (1994, Comedy) Brian Bonsall. ‘PG’ ffl

Growing Pains ffl

Growing Pains ffl

Walt Disney Presents“Mouseketeer Reunion” ffl

Zorro (InStereo) ffl

Mickey Mouse Club

Movie: ★ * * “Pollyanna" 1 (1960) Hayley Mills.‘G’ ffl

H BO(4:30) Movie: * * % “The Arrival” (1996, Science Fiction) Charlie Sheen. ‘PG-13’

Movie: * “My Boyfriend’s Back" (1993, Comedy) Andrew Lowery. ‘PG-13’ ®

Movie: * * * "Breakdown"(1997, Suspense) Kurt Russell. (In Stereo) ‘R’ ffl

Def Comedy All-Star Jam

Oz “Straight Life" (R) (In Stereo) ffl

Arliss (InStereo) ffl

Dennis Miller ffl

Spawn"Deathblow”

Movie: * “Beyond the Law" (1992,Drama) Charlie Sheen. (In Stereo) ‘R’ ffl 1

M A X(4:30) Movie: * * “Grease 2" (1982, Musical) Maxwell Caulfield. 'PG' ffl

Movie: ★ * “Jingle All the Way" (1996, Comedy) Arnold Schwarzenegger. ‘PG’

Movie: * '/ i ‘"Til There Was You"(1997) The meeting of two fated lovers is continually prevented. ‘PG-13’ ffl

Movie: * * * "Escape From New York" (1981, Science Fiction) Kurt Russell. ‘R’

Movie: "Midnight Temptations 2" (1997, Drama) Jane Daniels. (In Stereo) ‘R’

Erotic Confessions (InStereo)

SHO(3:00) Movie: “September” (1996) Jacqueline Bisset.

Movie: * * "Alaska" (1996) Thora Birch. Two youths brave the tundra to find their missing father. ‘PG’ BE

Movie: * * "Universal Soldier" (1992, Adventure) A genetically enhanced soldier reclaims his humanity. ‘R’

Stargate SG-1 (R) ffl

Outer Limits Who will get the only vaccines. (R) ffl

Hunger (In |Stereo) ffl

Poltergeist: | The Legacy

Red Shoe Diaries ffl

Red Shoe I Diaries ffl

“The Pamelal Principle 2 ” I

TM C(3:55) Movie: “The City of Lost Children" (1995) 'R'

Movie: * * ‘Who’s Harry Crumb?" (1989, Comedy) John Candy. ‘PG-13’ BE

Movie: * * “Cop and a Half" (1993, Comedy) Burt Reynolds. ‘PG’ ffl

Movie: *V-> “A Low Down Dirty Shame" (1994) Keenen Ivory Wayans. ‘R’ ffl

Movie: * * 1/ 2 "Eddie Murphy Raw" (1987, Comedy) Eddie Murphy. (In Stereo) ‘R’

Movie: "Exit in Red” (1996, Suspense) Mickey Rourke. A psychiatrist's world heats up after he finds a diary. 'R‘

PAGE 2 THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL JUNE 7, 1998

“Over 190,000people count on SMART every week. You can, too .”

NEWS & NOTES FROM SMART

Worried About GettingJust Get SMART/

I L y /w /iv p /Suburban Mobility Authority for Regional Transportation

M ore Routes. Record Ridership.A nd So M any Reasons to Ride! SMART'S on a Roll.

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If you think you don’t have access to reliable transportation, think again. With SMART, getting where you need to be is easy and economical. With over 55 routes covering Wayne, Macomb and Oakland County, we can get you where you need to be — on time and in your budget. No wonder over 190,000 Metro Detroiters ride SMART every week. You should, too.

N ew Job? Ride SMART For FREE!If you’re a newly-hired employee, SMART is better

than economical. It’s FREE. Compliments of SMART’S Get A Job, Get A Ride program. Here’s how it works:

• if you’ve been hired by a new employer within the last 30 days, you can receive a free SMARTCard

• your SMARTCard entitles you to ride SMART for up to one month, absolutely free

• ask your employer to call (313) 962-5515 for an introductory packet• you must work at least 32 hours per week

At SMART, we’re committed to rider convenience. That’s why, in addition to our regular bus service, we offer Community Transit.All you have to do is make a reservation and we’ll drive you directly to your destination (within our service area).Community Transit services include: • Advanced Reservation • Dial A-Ride • Job Shuttle. For your area community transit # call (313) 962-5515.

Hey Farmer Jack Bonus Savings Club Members, Ride FREE

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Community Transit Takes You Right To Your De

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This Earth Day, April 22nd, do your part to help the environment. Give your car the day off and hop on the SMART Bus. You’ll ride for free when you show your Farmer Jack Bonus Savings Club card. Plus, you can also get 10% off your monthly SMARTCard or Strip Tickets, just by being a member of the Farmer Jack Bonus Savings Club. Call (313) 962-5515 for more details.

Workers don’t see short strike at GMBy Martha HindesJournal S ta ff Writer

Workers a t General Motors’ metal fabricating plant in Flint don’t see a quick end to the strike th a t began Friday. But they are prepared for the long haul.

After months of wrangling with General Motors Corp. over contract violations, there wasn’t any other option left, say union officials. Rather than work toward an agreement, GM’s attitude was mostly arrogance, said union officials.

Local 659 P resident Dwayne Zuckschwerdt said GM had made commitments to the local during negotiations on the local agreement in 1996. “But almost from the day of ratification they have not lived up to what was in the agreement,” he said.

“Neither the leaders of the in terna­tional union, the local or this mem­bership wanted this confrontation,” said UAW Vice President Richard Shoemaker. “We are all disappointed tha t General Motors failed to step up and resolve the issues involved th a t made this strike necessary.”

Most GM plants will be affected by the strike.

Outside the Bristol Road plant on Friday afternoon, strikers spoke through a cacophony of honking horns and shouts of support from motorists.

Bill Kyle, a quality technician a t

the p lant for almost 24 years, said it was a strike whose time had come. “We can’t give them anymore,” he said.

“You have to do something. Every time you tu rn around, they’re taking jobs out of here.”

As the Friday deadline loomed, workers a t the plant, home of the fam ed 1937 sit-down strike th a t helped launch unionism in the auto industry, weren’t about to back down.

Support for a strike increased after GM moved a set of critical dies for the new GMT800 full-size pickup trucks out of the plant.

Those dies will stam p out the GMT800 parts th a t will go into GM’s new Silverado and S ierra pickup trucks th a t are among GM’s most profitable vehicles.

The tran sfe r was m ade over Memorial Day weekend.

GM spokesman Pete Ternes would not confirm a transfer, but said: “We move dies all the time. Normally it’s not an issue. A lot of our m achinery is common and we regularly shift dies to meet different capacity demands a t each plant.”

M etal fab w orkers operate the weighty presses th a t punch out sheet m etal hoods, fenders and roofs and the cradles th a t hold engines in place in automobiles.

UAW Local 659 represents 3,400 workers a t the plant.

UAW says Ford Hospital is targeting unionized jobs

By Alan ForsythJournal S ta ff Writer

UAW Local 600 has called a mass demonstration for June 17 to protest Henry Ford Hospital System’s deci­sion to close three clinics and elimi­nate jobs in other unionized clinics, costing 124 UAW jobs.

‘We are going to do everything in our power to stop this,” says Bernie Ricke, second vice president of Local 600. “Since Henry Ford took these clinics over, they’ve system atically been moving services and patients out of these unionized clinics.”

Henry Ford said the closings would cost 100 people their jobs but th a t they might be able to find new ones in the system.

Sixteen of those losing positions would be registered nurses, said Jane Ford, chair of Local 600’s registered nurses unit.

The UAW also has a service, m ain­tenance, technical and clerical un it a t Henry Ford. The last members of its

unit of social workers and substance abuse counselors were laid off in December, Jane Ford said.

On May 29 the hospital said it will close three clinics in Allen Park, Dearborn and Roseville on Aug. 1.

Ricke said the closings would force between 18,000 and 20,000 patients to go elsewhere for health care. “A lot of them are elderly, and these clinics are in their neighborhood,” he said.

Jane Ford said the unionized clinics reported to the board of the Health Alliance Plan until January 1996, when control was transferred to the Henry Ford board.

“In January of 1996 they ju st s ta rt­ed laying us off every six months. It’s obvious their intention is to break the union,” she said of the registered nurses unit.

The rally will be at 10:30 a.m. June 17 at Henry Ford Hospital, West Grand Boulevard at John C. Lodge in Detroit.

SUNDAY MORNING/AFTERNOON JUNE 7, 1998

8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30■ M — i — 1 m u a m

FOX O Eyewitness Weekend Fox News Sunday Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Honey, I Shrunk the Kids I Police Academy National Geo. Access Hollywood 33 Extra (In S tereo ) 33NBC o Newsbeat Today Sunday |Tennis: F rench O pen - M en ’s F ina l. (L ive) E Women’s Basketball: W orld C h a m p io n sh ip s F ina l Hoop-lt-UpABC o (7 :30) News Good Morning America Healthy Matlock “ The A bd uc tio n ” Siskel This Week 33 Spotlight Summer Film Preview TBA [Auto Racing C A R T F edE x C h am p. - D e tro it G r. PrixCBC o Cottage Gardener Coronation Street (R) Riverdale 33 Riverdale 33 50 Up 33 Auto Racing: FIA F orm ula O ne -- C anad ian G rand Prix. (L ive) 33 Canada |Sun. Arts Adrienne ClarksonWB 0D Kennedy Children Victory Oscar’s Mask Ghostbstrs All Dogs Go Zorro 33 Masters Boy-World [Movie: * * “HardPromises"( 1991) W illiam Petersen. Medicine Woman Baywatch “ Surf C ity " 33UPN © Monkeys Dinosaurs Beast Wars Algo Jumanji 33 Hulk Breaker Sw. Valley Movie: * * “Action Jackson" {1988) C arl W eathers. Movie: * * “Critical Condition" (1987) R ichard P ryor. “Ready to Viear"PBS © Sesame Street (In S te re o ) ] Contrary Inside Track AutoLine Editors TBA Grilling Secrets Monty Roberts-Horse Whisp. Why People Don’t Heal & How They Can (In S tereo) Three Levels of PowerCBS © [Paid Prog. |WallSt Sunday Morning 33 Face Nation Hard Copy [Golf Paid Prog. Paid Prog. |Trackand Field: NC A A O u tdo o r C h am p ion sh ip s . 33 PGA Golf: K em p er O pen -- F ina l R ound. (L ive) 33CABLE CHANNELSA&E (7:00) Movie: “Shipwreck" Breakfast With the Arts (R) |0penBook Biography International [Movie: ★★V2 “InsideDaisy Clover" (1965, D ram a) [American Justice (R) [Biography This Week (R) |Mysteries of the BibleAMC (7:30) Movie: “Wake Isle" Movie: * * * “Crash D/'ve” (1943) T y rone Pow er. Diary | Movie: * * * * “The Best Years of Our Lives" {1946, D ram a) F redric M arch. Movie: * * * “ The Fighting Sullivans" (1944, D ram a) "Home Bn/e”BET Brkthrgh Blessing Bobby Jones Gospel Gospel Lead Story Our Voices [Business |Paid Prog. |Paid Prog. Paid Prog. | Paid Prog. Paid Prog. | Paid Prog. Paid Prog. |Paid Prog. Paid Prog.

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E! One Day One Day Talk Soup (R ) News Weekend (R) Godzilla Mania (R) Talk Soup (R) Gossip (R) News Weekend (R) High Rollers (R) Fashion [BehindESPN ESPNews ESPNews NBA Sportsweekly [Reporters Sportscenter Equestrian |To Be Announced Stanley Cup Playoffs: W este rn F ina l G am e 7 - R ed W ing s at S tarsFAM In Touch 33 Animal Animal Christy (In S tereo) 33 "The Adventures of Milo and Otis" (1989) Movie: * * “How to Frame a Figg" (1971) Don Knotts. Movie: * * * "The Thrill of It All" (1963) D oris Day. | “Your-Mine"FSD Paid Prog. | Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Red Wings Aussie Rules Highlights Trails | Links (R) Golf (R) Pennant | Tigers Major League Baseball: D e tro it T ige rs at M ilw au kee B rew ers . (L ive)HIST History Showcase (R) Gadget Boy GadgtTrip Trips USA Year-Kids Trains Unlimited (R) MightyMis: Born Mighty Miss.: S team boa ts Mighty Miss.: W ar-R ive r |Mighty Miss.: A m erica Crusade [Battle LineLIFE Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Baby Kids These Golden Golden Movie: * * “Labor of Love” (1998) M arcia G ay H arden. Movie: "Cagney & Lacey: Together Again" (1995) Movie: “One of Her Own"NICK Muppets Tiny Toon Looney Tunes Rugrats 33 Beavers Hey Arnold! Monsters Rocko | Kablam! (R) My Brother Tiny Toon You Do |Crazy Kids |Global Guts |Temple Salute [ClarissaSCIFI Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Entertain In Space Swamp Godzilla Time Trax (In S tereo) 33 Web New Edge CNet Movie: * * “Critters" (1986) Dee W a llace S tone. “Terminator 2"TBS Scooby Flintstones Flintstones Videos Videos Movie: * * * V 2 “A River Runs Through It" 1992) C ra ig Sheffer. Interstitial Major League Baseball: A tlan ta B raves at B a ltim ore O rio les . (L ive) 33 | “Fatal Bty."TLC Paid Prog. Paid Prog. SchoolStor MenTlblts Renovation HomeSvy Hometime | Hometime Home Again | Home Again Ancient Prophecies | Ancient Prophecies Chariots of the Gods | Mysteries of the Bible (R)TNT Gilligan Gilligan Lois & Clark-Superman In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night Movie: “Thicker Than Blood" (1998) Dan Futte rm an. 33 Movie: * * ' / 2 “Point of No Return" (1993, D ram a)USA Wing Cmdr. Dragon MortalK Fighter Saved-Bell USA High WWF Superstars Wings 33 [Pacific Blue "R a ve O n " 33 Sliders "T he B ree de r" 33 Sliders "S o le S u rv ivo rs " [Movie: “Four Weddings and a Funeral"DISN Bear Mermaid Amazing Amazing Pluto “Land Before Time II" | “Land Before Time III: Grt Giving" | Sitters Flash |Torkelsons Torkelsons Movie: * * “The Mighty Ducks" (1992) E m ilio Estevez.HBO Movie: * * “Space Jam" (1996) ‘P G ’ 33 When It Was a Game I I 33 Movie: * * * “Twister"(1996) Helen Hunt. 'P G -13 ' 33 |Movie: ★★V2 “Can’t Buy Me Love" (1987) 'P G -13 ' Lifestories Movie: **'/■> "The Arrival" (1996 ) C h arlie Sheen. 33MAX (7:00) Movie Movie: * * * “Pretty in Pink" (1986 ) 33 Movie: * * “Dear God"( 1996) G reg K innear. 'P G ' 33 |Movie: * * * * “ G /g /" (1958) M aurice C heva lie r. ‘G ’ 33 |Movie: “The Perfect Mother" (1997) “Police Academy 4: Citizens on Patrol"SHO Munsch Munsch jStories |My Life-Dog Movie: *1 6 “RoboCop3” ( 1993) 'P G -13 ' |Movie: ★★ “Ruby Jean and Joe" (1996) Tom Selleck. |Movie: ★V2 “Being Human" (1994) R ob in W illiam s. 33 Movie: * * ’/ 2 "Side Out"[ 1990) 'P G -13 'TMC (6:50) Movie Movie: * * * “Jack & Sarah" (1995) R ichard E. G rant. |Movie: * * ' / 2 "Gunfighter’s Moon"(1996) |Movie: * ★ * "The Gambler" (1974) Jam es C aan. ‘R '3 3 |Movie: “Honeymoon in Vegas"(1992) 33 Movie: * * “Larger Than Life"( 1996) 33

SUNDAY EVENING JUNE 7,1998

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JUNE 7, 1998 PAGE 21

It’s hard to find quiet above the dinSeveral weeks ago I proposed

here th a t acres of public park and green space were prefer­able to casinos on the river­front. Subsequently there arrived a

package of letters from a sixth-grade class, most of whose members agreed. The two who didn’t were unanim ous in their sentiment: I f you want trees, get out o f town. This pair, sure to be the land developers of tomorrow, would probably feel the same about quiet places. I found trees today, but not much quiet.

And today’s Sunday, too. My dad never let us mow grass on Sunday - not for religious reasons, but because he thought one day of the week should be quiet. It’s one of the few things he taught me th a t stuck.

T hat’s why my teeth clench when people run their mowers early Sunday morning. A sim ilar physio­logical disturbance occurs when a stereo down the block cranks up to am phitheater volume a t 11 p.m. any night. I don’t like my tranquillity messed with.

OK, you kids, where do I go if I w ant quiet?

B eaufor t

C r a n f o r d

Cranbrook Gardens on this Sunday was bright and perfect, with flowers blooming and birds singing and the woods full of life. The wind made a lovely sound.

The band across the lake made a lovely sound, too, though I’d have thought it much lovelier had they been m aking it in Mongolia. Somehow, leaning on a bridge railing in the sunshine, watching baby ducks paddle by, loses a bit of its power to comfort and restore when accompanied by H arry Chapin’s emetic “Cat’s in the Cradle.”

After making sure the concert was a one-time event, I vowed to go back. And when I got home, I surfed to www.nonoise.com, home page of the Noise Pollution Clearinghouse. “Noise is unwanted sound,” they

preach, softly. Good definition; they had ideas worth stealing, too.

I know what noise is, of course. I no longer camp in Michigan because of the ill-mannered cretins whose campsites are as loud as the insides of ju te mills. I got tired of telling them to shut up and having them call me a communist or worse.

We all make too much noise some­time; I have to cut my grass, and the trucks collecting trash and recy- clables intrude on a peaceful morn­ing. Some noise can’t be helped.

Lots of it can, however. Generally it’s only the disdain for other people tha t seems more and more to be a defining characteristic of Americans tha t keeps assaultive sound out there.

We have a right to resent people putting noise into the environment without our permission. Noise degrades the quality of life as much as other environmental pollution. We have rules against fouling the water, air and ground; so we should draw the line on noise, too. If noise pollu­tion made a stinking fog, which it cer­tainly does to some of us, the authori­ties might pay more attention.

People make noise; they can con­trol when and often how much. Usually they don’t. Some people seem to have to be loud so others will notice them; these people are ju st bullies, and they deserve our pity as well as our scorn. Others seem unable to abide quiet, as though something inside their heads would be terrifying to hear.

It’s one thing to say th a t people don’t have a right to broadcast noise as they please; it’s quite another to enforce it. You also get into trouble trying to define the right to live without intrusive noise. On the other hand, the problem of noise is almost always about m anners. It should be obvious th a t our noises don’t stop with our property lines, our cars or our Je t Ski exhausts. We can be jerks about noise or be considerate.

So those of you inclined to be noisy, have mercy on those of us who want to hear something besides your rack­et. Turn it down, tu rn it off. We’re trying to listen to the real world.

Beaufort Cranford is a locked-out Detroit News copy editor.

Eurasian Grill only hints at how good it could be

Journal photo by GEORGE WALDMAN

David Sherman is m anager of the Eurasian Grill in West Bloomfield.

Unfortunately, th a t’s where the good parts end a t Eurasian Grill, billed ambitious­ly as “fusion” cuisine.And while the kitchen showed some skill with the sea bass, the rest of the food was like something from a mediocre Chinese takeout.

The menu has abso­lutely nothing “fusion” about it. “Fusion” implies that the chef is going to blend all kinds of accents and* flavors and cooking styles to come up with unique tastes and ideas. There was a restauran t called Eurasia in Chicago a few years ago th a t did fusion cooking very successfully, nothing like this place.

Putting porterhouse steak — “all-American favorite” — and “free range veal chop au jus” on the same menu with Gen. Tao chick­en, egg foo young (sic) or moo goo gai pan does not make fusion anything.

Most of all, Eurasian Grill fell apart for us on the same problem th a t plagues most restaurants: the

front end and waitstaff. We arrived a t about 6:40 p.m. The m aitre d’ who seated us ju st doesn’t have what this restaurant is trying to be. No crisp­ness. No polish. No graciousness.

It’s not possible to be an effective host a t a fancy-looking restauran t when you wear Docksiders, rumpled

cotton slacks, a golf shirt and a dou­ble-breasted blazer th a t’s hanging open because it doesn’t fit around the waist.

Once we were seated, he kept com­ing over to us and trying to engage us with his witty conversation, leav-

See COOK, Page 24

Let’s s ta rt with the good part, which was a very well-pre­pared Chilean sea bass in a green curry sauce, atop thin

slivers of steam ed root vegetables and bok choy cabbage.

The fish itself was fresh and almost block-shaped and had been cooked to th a t perfect point a t which the layers of flesh ju st begin to peel away from each other; it was sweet,

very moist, glistening and pure white. It was delightfully good.

The same could be said of the decor of Eurasian Grill, a fairly new restau ran t on the east side of Haggerty Road, ju st north of Pontiac Trail, in West Bloomfield.

The decor is a mix of black and sandy brown walls and ceiling set off by a bright, clean beechwood flooring and simple accent lights hanging over tables.

There is a U-shaped bar against one wall, and the restau ran t has the overall feeling of Scandinavian mod­ern design more than clean-lined F ar Eastern.

C h risCo o kRestaurants

PAGE 22 JUNE 7, 1998

going out

Design students showcase their ideasBy K athlyn H oodJournal Staff Writer

H enry Ford M useum & Greenfield Village and the students from D etroit’s C enter for C reative Studies present two exhibits a t the Henry

Ford M useum, 20900 Oakwood Blvd., Dearborn.

“A rt & Artifact: CCS F iber Design” continues through Ju ly 5 and “Passages to Innovations: CCS Interior Design” is on exhibit through Sept. 20.

The exhibitions are a collaboration between the m useum and CCS’ fiber design and in terior design depart­ments.

The fiber design project required students to select a historic object from the m useum collection and create a contem porary piece inspired by the original object.

In the “F u tu re History,” the young designers were instructed to select historic pieces of fu rn itu re from the m useum collection to serve as the platform s and inspiration for the ir contem porary pieces of furniture. Hours are 9 a.m .-5 p.m. daily. E n ter through the Anderson T heater entrance. Call 313-271-1620.

Indian Village tourThe 26th annual H istoric Indian Village

Home and G arden Tour will feature six homes and three gardens, a display of clas­sic cars, a walk through Indian Village C entennial G arden, tours of several histori­cally significant churches and schools and the “A rt Lot.” I t’s 10-5 Sat. Tickets are $15. The tour begins a t E ast Jefferson Presbyterian Church, 8625 E. Jefferson a t Bum s. Call 313-922-0911.

‘Two Women for Peace’Swords into Plow shares Peace Center

and Gallery’s exhibit, “Two Women for Peace: Dorothy Day and M uriel Lester,” continues through Ju ly 4. Day was co­founder of the Catholic W orkers Movement. When Gandhi w ent to E ngland for the Round Table Conference on the Freedom of India, he stayed w ith L ester ra th e r th an be the guest of the king of England. The Peace Center is 33 E. Adams, Detroit. 313-963- 7575.

MAAH concertsThe Museum of African American History

is observing Black Music Month w ith sever­al free concerts. Take a b lanket and join the MAAH on the lawn, 6-9 p.m. Fridays. The schedule: “Motown Sounds” featuring Michael Brock and the Contours, th is Fri.; “Jazz of Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow,” fea­turing Donald Walden and David Myles & the Mylestones, June 19; and “Caribbean,” featuring Francisco Mora, Amigo Latin Jazz and Caribbean Pans of Joy, June 26.

A multim edia concert, “Ask Your Mama: Twelve Moods for Jazz,” which uses words, music and images to highlight the life of author Langston Hughes, will be 7-9 p.m. Sat. $10 general, $8 for members, $5 for ages 18 and younger, 315 W. W arren, Detroit, 313-494-5800.

Marygrove dance recitalDetroit’s Marygrove College presents the

10th anniversary of its children’s dance recital. About 100 students, ages 7-16, will

perform in “Cinderella,” 6 p.m. Sat. and 2 p.m. next Sun., a t the college theater, 8425 W. McNichols a t Wyoming. Choreographer Veronica Jakubus, Marygrove adjunct dance faculty member, has been the dance instructor for all of the recitals. $1. 313- 927-1230.

Selected concerts■ The Ark (unless marked otherwise, shows s ta r t a t 8): Over the Rhine with Jason Dennie, tonight, $10; Riders in the Sky, 7:30 and 10 p.m. Fri., $15; Hal Ketchum, 7:30 next Sun., $17.50; 316 S. Main S t., Ann Arbor, 734-761-1451.■ American Horse (with three members of Jackopierce), 9:30 Thu., $8, Blind Pig, 208 S. F irst, Ann Arbor, 734-996-8742.■ Magic Bag (shows s ta r t a t 8): Playhouse featuring D J Kimeon from Ohio, tonight,$6; Jolene & the Pem ice Brothers, Mon.,$6; Burlap to Cashmere with Susan Calloway, June 30, $6, 22920 Woodward, Ferndale, 248-544-3030.■ Project Two, Adrian Belew, Robert Fripp, Trey Gunn, 8 tonight, $25, the Majestic, 4140 Woodward, Detroit, 313-833-9700.■ Meadowbrook (unless marked, concerts begin a t 8): Teen Idols starring Peter Noone, Davy Jones and Bobby Sherm an, June 19, $12.50/$22.50; Phil Collins Big Band Tour featuring guest vocalist Oleta Adams and saxophonist Gerald Albright, June 23, $20/ $40, 248-377-0100.■ The Palace: Page & P lan t with Lili Haydn, 8 p.m. June 26-27, $35/$50; Tori Amos, 7:30 July 23, $35; Backstreet Boys, 7:30 July 24, $26.50; Spice Girls, 8 p.m.July 26, $30/ $35; the Verve and Massive Attack, 8 p.m. Ju ly 29, $20, 248-377-0100.■ Jazz Is Dead, JGB, Ekostik Hookah and Smokin’ Grass, gates open a t 2 p.m. Sat., $20, Phoenix Plaza Am phitheatre, Pontiac, 248-645-6666.■ Pine Knob (unless marked, shows begin a t 7:30): Lynyrd Skynyrd with Freddy Jones Band and .38 Special, 6:30 p.m. Thu., $12.50/ $25; Doobie Brothers w ith Jack Ingram, Fri., $12.50/$25; Bugs Bunny on Broadway, symphony performs live music to classic W arner Brothers cartoons, 8 p.m. Sat., $12.50 /$22.50; John Fogerty, June 18, $12.50/ $22.50, “An Evening with the Moody Blues,” June 19, $12.50/$29.50;Vince Gill and Restless H eart, June 20, $15.50/$25.50/ $32.50; Boys II Men with Next, Destiny’s Child and Uncle Sam, 7 p.m. June 21, $25/ $45; H eart featuring Ann Wilson w ith the Tubes w ith Fee Waybill, June 24, $12.50 /$22.50, 248-377- 0100 .

■ The Fixx with Noella Hutton, 8 p.m.June 17, $20, 7th House, 7 N. Saginaw, Pontiac, 248-335-8100.

MusicSoup Kitchen Saloon (music begins a t 9):

Liquid Bros, 6-10 p.m. every Sun.; DOWG Band open blues jam session, every Tue.; II- V-I Orchestra, big band jazz, 9 p.m. every Thu.; Johnny (Yard Dog) Jones, Fri.; Hastings S treet Blues Band, Sat., 1585 Franklin , a t Orleans, Detroit, 313-259-1374 ... Jan Krist, 10 p.m. Fri.-Sat., Jim m y’s, 123 Kercheval, Grosse Pointe Farm s, 313-861- 8101 ... Jim m y’s Double A (music begins a t 10): the Articles, Thu.; S ister Seed, Fri.; Jo Serrapere, Sat., 314 S. Main, Ann Arbor, 313-332-0800 ... Library Sports Pub & Grill (music begins a t 10): GRR featuring Stephen G rant Wood, Thu.; Immunity, Fri., and Nikki Jam es & the Flam ethrowers,Sat., 42100 Grand River, Novi, 248-349- 9110 ... Library Sports Pub & Grill,C hapter II (music begins a t 10): the Look, Thu.-Fri.; Jill Jack, Sat., 35230 Central City Parkway, W estland, 313-421-2250 ...

Kodiak Grill (music begins a t 10): 2XL, Fri.; Foolish Mortals, Sat., 45660 Mound, Utica, 810-731-1750 ... the Lodge (music begins a t 10): Twistin T arantulas, Fri.; Gypsy Tribe, Sat., 2442 O rchard Lake, Sylvan Lake, 248- 683-5458 ... Royal Oak Brewery (music begins a t 8:30): Danny Cox, Wed.; S ister Seed, Thu., 215 E. Fourth, Royal Oak, 248- 544-1141 ... Foolish Mortals, 9:30 Fri.-Sat., Union Lake Grill & Bar, 2280 Union Lake Road, Commerce Twp., 248-360-7450 ...Pull, 10 p.m. Sat., Mt. Chalet, 32955 Woodward, Royal Oak, 248-549-2929 ... Sun 209, 9:30 p.m. Sat., Bo’s Bistro, 51 N. Saginaw, Pontiac, 248-338-6200 ...Gillespie, Rasmussen & Raffoul, 9 p.m. Wed., Captain Tony’s, 30919 N. Woodward, Royal Oak, 248-288-6388 ... GRR, 9 tonight, Memphis Smoke, 100 S. Main, Royal Oak, 248-543-4300 ... the Rev. Marc Falconberry, 7:30 p.m. Sat., Hazel Park Racetrack, 1650 E. 10 Mile, Hazel Park, 248-398-1000 ... Drinks N orth (music begins a t 10): Mystery Train featuring Jim McCarty, Sat., 2505 Pontiac Lake Road, Waterford, 248-683- 8186 ... Sean Blackman and John Arnold, 8 p.m. Fri.-Sat., R attlesnake Club, 300 River Place, Detroit, 313-567-4400 ... the Deck (music 5-7 p.m.): Trinidad Tripoli Steel Drum Band, Fri.; Immunity, Sat., 2301 Woodward, on the roof of the Second City building, 313-965-9500 ... Aural Fixation,10 p.m. Sat., $5, 313-Jac (at Jacoby’s), 624 Brush, Detroit, 313-886-7860.

Theater/danceMichigan Opera Theatre presents the

Gershwin’s “Porgy & Bess,” featuring Peabo Bryson, 2 and 7:30 today and next Sun., 8 p.m. Wed.-Sat., $18-$95, Detroit Opera House, 1526 Broadway, 313-874-7464 ... Detroit Repertory Theatre presents Midwest premiere of “Odd Jobs,” by Canadian playwright F rank Moher, 8:30 Thu.-Fri., 3 and 8:30 Sat., 2 and 7:30 Sun., through June 28, $15, 13103 Woodrow Wilson, Detroit, 313-868-1347 ... Huron Valley Community Theatre auditions for “The P irates of Penzance,” 7-9 p.m. Mon.- Tue., Oxbow Elem entary School on Elizabeth Lake Road in W hite Lake Twp.; be prepared to sing a song of your choice and read from the script; accompanist pro­vided; performances Aug. 28-29 and Sept. 4- 5 a t Lakeland High School in W hite Lake, 248-698-2668 or 248-685-9608 ... Stagecrafters’ “Kismet: A Musical A rabian N ight,” 2 p.m. today, $12-$ 14, Baldwin Theatre, 415 S. Lafayette, Royal Oak, 248- 541-6430 ... MorrisCo Art Theatre presents Oscar Wilde’s “The Im portance of Being E arnest,” 8 p.m. Thur.-Sat. and 2 p.m. Sun., through June 14, $9-$ 12. 408 W. Washington, Ann Arbor, 734-663-0681 ... “Rent,” through Sat. v Fisher Theatre, 3011 W. Grand Blvd., Detroit, $24-$60, 248-645- 6666.

Film/comedyMuseum of African American History,

“Urban Musical Cinema Series,” free movies about African-American musicians in celebration of Black Music Month, 6-8 p.m. every Sun. “Thelonious Monk: S traight No Chaser,” today; “Bird: Charlie (Yardbird) Parker,” next Sun.; “The Cotton Club,” June 21, and Jim i Hendrix, June 28, 315 W. W arren in Detroit, 313-494-5800 ... Second City’s “Down Riverdance,” 8 p.m. Wed.-Thu. and Sun. and 8 and 10:30 p.m., Fri.-Sat., $10-$ 19.50, 2305 Woodward, Detroit, 313- 965-2222.

Out & aboutBlackapalooza Gallery presents

Blackapalooza Tour Party, w ith music, art, fashions, live performances and more, 8-

m idnight Sat., 65 Cadillac Square, Cadillac Tower, $10, 313-222-7616.

Authors/learningD etroit H istorical M useum, “A

Community Between Two Worlds: Arab Americans in G reater D etroit,” chronicling D etroit’s Arab-American comm unity from the late 1800s, through Oct. 4, 5401 Woodward, D etroit, 313-833-1805 ... Greenfield Village/Henry Ford Museum, Oakwood Boulevard and Village Road, Dearborn, $12.50 general, $11.50 seniors, $6.25 ages 5-12, 313-271-1620 ... Sham an Drum Bookshop (readings begin a t 8 p.m.): Wally Lamb will read from “I Know This Much Is True,” Mon.; Robert Chaffee reads from “From W ithin: Void, Perception, Consciousness, Being,” Wed., 313 S. S tate St., Ann Arbor, 800-490-7023.

Exhibits/art/design“Douglas F raser: A Union Legend,”

Exhibition Gallery, W alter P. R euther Library, 5401 Cass, D etroit, 313-577-8377 ... Cranbrook A rt Museum: “Bound & Gagged: The Sculptural Book,” featuring the work of six Michigan-based artists , and “A Loaded Brush: Recent Paintings by Nancy B rett,” both through Aug. 16; “New Work by Cranbrook Academy of A rt A rtists on View,” and “Cranbrook In tim ate Space: Photography by Gene Meadows and Cranbrook A rt M useum ,” through Sept. 6; 11-5 Tue.-Sun., 11-9 Thu., $3-$5, 1221 N. Woodward, Bloomfield Hills, 248-645-3323 ... Zeitgeist Gallery, works of John E lker and Roger Hayes, through June, 2661 Michigan Ave. (formerly M ichigan Gallery), Detroit, noon-5 Sat. or by appointm ent, 313-965-9192 ... Photo exhibit commemo­rating Paul Robeson, M ain D etroit Library, 5201 Woodward, 313-833-4042 ... Studio Gallery of Robert Maniscalco, works by native D etroit a r tis t Carol Wald, C hristian Aldo Sfalcin of W indsor and Grady Avant, Jac Purdon and Robert Maniscalco, all of Grosse Pointe, through June, 17329 Mack, north of Cadieux, D etroit, 313-886-2993 ... D etroit In s titu te of Arts: “The French In terior in the 18th Century,” an introduc­tion to French decorative arts , led by Tracey Albainy, DIA curator of European sculpture and decorative arts , $30, $24 for members, $12 for students, 10-noon Sat., and June 20, Holley Room; “A Celebration of Lithography: 19th-Century Invention and Innovation”; 2 p.m. next Sun., Schwartz Graphic A rts Gallery, and Ju n e 27 and 28 in lecture hall; “Beauties From the Basement: Pain tings From the European Collection,” through Sept. 13; “Claes Oldenburg: P rin ted Stuff,” through June 14; “H arbingers of Spring: The Flowering C herry and Plum ,” through today, 11-4 Wed.-Fri., 11-5 weekends, 5200 Woodward, 313-833-7900.

New on saleAt Pine Knob: Matchbox 20, Soul Asylum

and Semisonic, Aug. 18, $29.50 pavil- ion/$20 lawn; Kenny Rogers, Aug. 23,$29.50 pavilion/$15.50 lawn; Blues Music Festival featuring B.B. King, the Neville Brothers, Dr. John and Storyville, Sept. 2, $28.50 pavilion/$ 15.50 lawn ... Also: Box Set opens for Huey Lewis & the News, July 20 a t Pine Knob; Steve E arle opens for the Allman Brothers Band, Aug. 9 a t Pine Knob.

Send “Going Out” items to the Detroit Sunday Journal, 450 W. Fort, Detroit 48226, or fax to 313-964-5554. Deadline is 10 days before publication.

JUNE 7, 1998 - m PAGE 23

rating guideO see it now § wait for the video

£0 read a book instead

recent openings“A lm ost H eroes” (not reviewed)The late Chris Farley stars in this comedy about two explorers who lead a band of hopeless and clueless mis- adventurers in a race to beat Lewis and Clark across the uncharted American West. PG-13.“H ope F loats” £Q Hope sinks in “Hope Floats,” which m eans th a t the sweetly appealing Sandra Bullock will need another shot a t a turnaround movie to get her back in the win column after the disastrous “Speed 2.” She likely will survive the predictability and lethargy of this effort th a t suggests the charm and sparkle of a bowl full of soggy corn­flakes. PG-13. — M att Black “I Got the H ook-Up” (not reviewed) A comedy about two street entrepreneurs who are running a shopping center out of their van. R. “The Last D ays o f D isco” O The highest compliment one can pay W hit Stillm an’s “The Last Days of Disco” is to say th a t it’s right up there with his previous two come­dies, “M etropolitan” and “Barcelona.” Like those films, it’s a comedy of a tti­tudes wrapped in a comedy of nightlife — in this case a citadel of hipness loosely modeled on Xenon and Studio 54 (which is getting its own film later this summer). R. —M. Black“W ilde” O “Wilde,” directed by Brian Gilbert and starring Stephen Fry, is a superbly judged biofilm th a t res­cues Oscar Wilde from mere gay icon sta tus and compels us to admire his talent, style and brave-heartedness. Apart from being the closest thing to a dead ringer in the several films about Wilde, Fry convinces us he enjoys inhabiting the character and m akes us share his embrace of Wilde. R . — M. Black

still showingo

“A rtem isia” R. — M. Black“As Good As It G ets” PG-13. — M.Black“The B ig H it” R. — Michelle Banks “The B orrow ers” PG. — M. Banks “B ulw orth” R. — M. Banks “B u tcher B oy” R. — M. Black “Character” R. — M. Black “City o f A ngels” PG-13. — M.Black“Deja Vu” Unrated. — M. Black “G rease” PG. — M. Black “Good Will H unting” R. — M. Black “The H orse W hisperer” PG-13. — M. Black“Les M iserables” PG-13. — M.

just opened

Douglas continues his evil waysBy Michelle BanksSpecial to the Journal“A Perfect Murder” i

Films such as “Basic Instinct,” “Fatal Attraction” and, most recent­ly, “The Game” have made Michael Douglas something of the king of the psychological thriller genre.

And he earns his title in “A Perfect Murder,” with a perfor­mance th a t keeps this hollow mys­tery from becoming a total waste of time.

Based on Alfred Hitchcock’s clas­sic “Dial M for Murder,” which starred Ray Milland and Grace Kelly, “A Perfect M urder” starts off promisingly. Conniving millionaire businessman Steven Taylor (Douglas) discovers th a t his wife, Emily (Gwyneth Paltrow), is having an affair with shady bohemian artist David Shaw (Viggo Mortensen). Rather than sulk over his wife’s deceit, he decides to use this revelation to his advantage. With a large sum of money and incriminating information about Shaw’s past, Taylor lays out the plans to blackmail him for the m ur­

der of his wife.When Taylor’s murderous scheme starts to backfire, the plot twists come, tables tu rn and all eyes fall on Taylor to see how he will weasel his way out of it all and look like the good guy.

Douglas struts through­out the movie, turning his predatory char­acter Taylor Photo by a n d r e w s c h w a r t z

fellow w h o ^ 6 Married life is shaky for Gwyneth Paltrow and Michael Douglas.

ju st fallen on hard times. He easily two. M ortensen has better successovershadows his younger co-stars, with Douglas, as their cat-and-especially Paltrow. She’s mismatched mouse game pushes Paltrow’s char-with Douglas, and not ju st because of acter, and her well-being, furtherthe gaping age difference; an imbal- and further from relevance — whichance of screen presence only hamm ers winds up making the ending all thein the lack of chemistry between the more anticlimactic. Rated R.

Black“M ouseH unt” PG. — M. Banks “P au lie” PG. — M. Banks “Prim ary Colors” R. — M. Black “Q uest for Cam elot” G. — M.Banks“Scream 2” R. — M. Banks “The Spanish P risoner” PG. — M.Black“Titanic” PG-13. — M. Banks “U.S. M arshals” PG-13. — M. Banks“The W edding Singer” PG-13. — M. Banks“Wild T hings” R. — M. Banks

I P B W * |p p |p r * | p p y * * s

“C hinese Box” R. — M. Black “D eep Im pact” PG-13. — M. Banks “G odzilla” PG-13. — M. Black “He Got Game” R. — M. Banks “Shooting F ish” PG. — M. Black “S lid ing Doors” R. — M. Black

“Barney’s Great A dventure” G. “Black Dog” PG-13.“N eil Sim on’s ‘The Odd Couple II’ ”PG-13.“The P layer’s Club” R.“Species II” R.

“Tarzan and the Lost City” PG-13.

CQ1 - J W W W ' < ' 1 , W W

“Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas” R. — M. Black “M ercury R ising” R. — M. Black “A Price Above R ubies” R. — M.Black“Two Girls and a Guy” R. — M.Black“Woo” R. — M. Black

coming attractions“B eyond S ilence” Set in a small town in Germany, this film chronicles the life of a young girl raised by deaf parents. Not rated yet.“Can’t H ardly Wait” A comedy about teens graduating from high school and searching for their next move while making a statem ent about their future — beyond, we assume, “Let’s party!” Not rated yet. “Dirty Work” “Saturday Night Live” alums Norm Macdonald, Chevy Chase and the late Chris Farley star in this comedy about a spiteful loser who starts a business specializing in revenge. PG-13.“Six Days, Seven N ights” Harrison Ford, Anne Heche and David Schwimmer (“Friends”) star in this romantic action comedy about a gruff cargo pilot and an acerbic New York magazine editor stranded on a desert island. Yes, there is sex. PG-13.

Truman’s troubles titillate TV viewersTRUMAN, from P age 11the serious and moving moments of “The Trum an Show,” Carrey evokes sympathy as a m an unknowingly caged in an artificial dreamworld with actors pretending to be his fami­ly and friends. To an audience, he’s entertainm ent; in reality, he’s a vic­tim.

Providing the film with more impact is Ed H arris as the grandiose artist Christof, who’s responsible for creating the surreal “world away from the rest of the world” life of Truman. H arris is perfect as he orchestrates Trum an’s life with thou­sands of tiny cameras and a score from composer Philip Glass a t his disposal. When Trum an slowly becomes aware of the deception, Christof arranges a reunion between Truman and his long-lost father, for the sake of m aintaining Trum an’s and his audience’s interest.

With ratings his priority, Christof undoubtedly thinks TV and its pow­erful hold on the masses are wonder­ful. Fortunately, so is “The Truman Show.” PG.

PAGE 24 THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL JUNE 7, 1998

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Eurasian Grill only hints at how good it can beCOOK, from Page 21ing us feeling as if we were going to end up buying something we didn’t want.

Our waitress was very sweet but seemed not to know what to do or much about what she was serving or how to serve.

(Why does this happens so much in restaurants around this area? Can you imagine a car salesman not knowing whether the car he sells has air bags or anti-lock brakes?)

Anyway, for appetizers we ordered fresh Vietnamese spring rolls with a Thai dipping sauce and something called shaomai.

W hat we got were very deeply fried Chinese-style spring rolls, which also were listed on the menu. When the waitress brought the delicacy to the table, she placed the spring roll in front of my guest, turned to me with a smile and said "... and pot stickers for you.”

Not knowing exactly what to expect, and seeing tha t these clearly were not pot stickers, I shrugged my shoulders and tried them. Ju s t awful.

The shaomai, described as “chick­en, shrimp & vegetable in Chinese pastry,” was nothing like that. I’m still not quite sure what it is we got, but there was no pastry a t all.Instead I was presented with a plate dressed in a lettuce leaf bearing four warm, little gray balls.

The texture only added to my sus­picion: rather bland, springy rubber tha t may have been chicken in a pre­vious incarnation but showed no sign of anything remotely like shrimp and or ever having been within range of vegetable.

So I reached for the wine list, which was almost all chardonnay on the white wine side of the column, even though virtually nothing on the

m enu goes with chardonnay. When I found something th a t wasn’t chardonnay, Mr. Charm showed up with two glasses and my bottle. As he struggled with the corkscrew, which he didn’t seem to know how to use, he tried again to engage us in conversation. We ignored him and kept talking to each other.

Thirty m inutes went by. No entrees. Then our waitress appeared w ith a basket of warm bread. We now had been seated for about an hour. Finally our entrees appeared, and the place redeemed itself on the sea bass.

Only another problem arose: My guest had ordered the shrim p with lobster sauce, bu t w hat arrived at the table was a bowl of black bean sauce with some ra th e r gelatinous marine-looking things, and a few shrimp. It was very bland.

“W hat’s in this?” we asked. The waitress padded off to the kitchen and returned. “Black beans and oys­ters,” she reported with a smile. We panicked. My guest is highly allergic to clams, oysters and mussels, and nowhere on the menu had the ingre­dients been described. When the guest had no reaction, we figured the waitress m ust have been told “oyster mushrooms,” because we found something th a t looked like one in the bowl. We got the check, sighed and left, grateful to be going.

Eurasian Grill was a great disap­pointm ent because it sounded so good and looked so promising. Despite my experience, it’s obvious it can do some things well but needs a lot of work and organization. I would even try it again in a few months. But for now, if you go, you have been cautioned.

Eurasian Grill, 4771 Haggerty Road, West Bloomfield, 248-624-6109.

horoscopeAries (March 21 - April 20)Stick by your decisions and show others

you are serious about your work. Don’t be so petty about the little things.

Taurus (April 21 - May 20)A love relationship is going through some

difficult changes. Sometimes a little time is all you need to get yourself together.

Gemini (May 21 - June 20)Avoid making unnecessary purchases.

Doing charity work makes you feel better while you are helping others.

Cancer (June 21 - July 20)A problem can be solved more easily than

you think. Step back and try to see things from a different perspective.

Leo (July 21 - Aug. 21)The past is still haunting you and it is

time to let go. A class or new hobby can help you get back on the right path.

Virgo (Aug. 22 - Sept. 22)You may w ant to help a family member

get used to a new environment. Be careful around large machinery, especially cars.

Libra (Sept. 23 - Oct. 22)Stop being so critical of loved ones. You

will be much happier once you learn to accept others as they are.

Scorpio (Oct. 23 - Nov. 22)Explore your career options. You will have

an opportunity to m eet someone new during a weekend getaway.

Sagittarius (Nov. 23 - Dec. 20)You have the opportunity for some fun,

and you need to take advantage of it. Let your hair down and enjoy yourself.

Capricorn (Dec. 21 - Jan. 19)Pay attention to details on the job. You

will be disappointed if you continue to rely on others for your happiness.

Aquarius (Jan. 20 - Feb. 18}Try to be a b it more spontaneous. You may

surprise yourself when your creative side decides to get busy.

Pisces (Feb. 19 - March 20)Children may depend on you for some

guidance. Be tru thful, tactful and kind when giving advice.

JUNE 7, 1998 THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL PAGE 25

Ask DJ

Don’t tie child’s chores to weekly allowance

My 5-year-old daughter came home from kindergarten the other day and announced she wanted to start receiv­ing an allowance. She said her friends all get money for doing jobs, and she wants to earn money, too. I think this coincides with some lessons on money they have been doing at her school. When I was growing up we didn’t get an allowance and didn’t really have our own money till we were old enough to baby-sit or mow the neighbor’s lawn. Isn’t 5 a little too young for all o f this1? —Frugal in Ferndale

Dear Frugal,The experts say 5 is not too young.

Kids do seem more sophisticated these days. Heck, by 5 they can boot up a computer and know which fash­ion designer labels they w ant on their jeans.

Giving your child an allowance is like giving her some independence. The way you handle money with her will transm it your values about money and the world.

Here is some advice from Dr. Doug Barnett, a psychologist specializing in child development a t Wayne State University.■ Give your child chores and give her an allowance, but don’t tie one to the

other. “Chores are important,” Barnett said. “Children who have responsibilities at home have a leg up in socialization. ... A child’s chores should be geared to his abilities and should be something for him to feel proud and successful at.” At 5 that could mean helping set the table and picking up toys. Linking the chores to money, he said, could end up making her feel incompetent and strain the parent-child relationship.■ Let a child do extra jobs to earn bonuses as a supplement to his or her allowance.■ Be ready to let her make some mis­takes with her money. “If a child wastes some money, it should never be used to say, ‘I told you so.’ This is a great time to empathize, to say, ‘I know how you feel.’ ”■ Almost any allowance system can be successful if you base it on the child’s level of maturity. A 3-year-old may be perfectly happy with a packet of play money, while a 13-year-old may be ready to use a portion to sup­plement the college fund.

Got a question? Ask the DJ. Write to 450 W. Fort, Detroit 48226; fax to 313-964-5554, or e-mail to [email protected].

An electrifying PorgyPORGY from , P a g e 11

and elsewhere developed their char­acter w ith such accuracy th a t Serena seemed like a tru sted old friend long before interm ission. Jeffrey Lavar and Timothy Robert Blevins used their massive bodies and not-quite- as-massive voices to m ake Crown a larger-than-life villain.

Oscar and Grammy winner Peabo Bryson can add opera to his laurels, his “Sportin’ Life” a highly attractive combination of commanding stage presence and solid vocalism. K arla B urns rightly made M aria the emo­tional linchpin of Catfish Row, w hether th reaten ing Sportin’ Life with a butcher knife or offering Porgy a consoling embrace.

Richard Hobson was a fine Jake. Roberta Gumbel (television s ta r Bryant Gumbel’s cousin) sang “Sum m ertim e” w ith lyrical innocence. Virginia W inters (Lily), Glen Holcomb (Crab Man) and A laina Brown (Straw berry Woman) made their sm aller parts especially memo­rable.

Suzanne Acton’s chorus, one of the largest used in an MOT production, was cohesive, energized, well-balanced and as much a factor in the opera’s

success as any of the principals.Brilliantly overseeing th a t success

was conductor John DeMain, who, w ith the possible exception of Gershwin himself, knows this score better than anyone ever has. The MOT O rchestra played with verve, accuracy and polish.

Tazewell Thompson’s eloquent stage direction sprang from the music with such fluid grace it should be required viewing for anyone faced with staging opera. Kenneth Foy’s set, handsomely lit by Ken Billington, provided a perfect back­drop for the score, and Julie Arenal’s choreography was an apt visualiza­tion of Gershwin’s pungent rhythm s.

During his too-short lifetime, Gershwin had to settle for a pared- down version of w hat some claimed was his operatic failure. Had he been able to witness this MOT production, he would know how utterly success­ful his operatic venture really was.

The remaining performances of “Porgy and Bess” take place at the Detroit Opera House at 2 and 7:30 p.m. today and next Sunday; 8 p.m. Wednesday-Saturday and June 19-20, and 2 p.m. June 21. Call 313-874- 7464 anytime.

f ROSANNE C. LESS

t A tto rn ey a t L awFormer Member, Newspaper Guild

Em phasizing a progres­sive view in all areas of fam ily law.

P h one (313) 382-56226828 Park Avenue, Allen Park, MI 48101

S o lid a r i ty F o r e v e rMICHIGAN FEDERATION OF TEACHERS & SCHOOL RELATED PERSONNEL AFT • A F L -C IO

2661 East Jefferson Avenue • Detroit M ichigan 48207

COMMUNICATIONS WORKERSOF AMERICA AFL-CIOLOCAL 4250/5050

PRESIDENT

Supports Newspaper Workers in their Struggle

. , U)XV WORKERS

L ocal 223 , Along with Thousands o f Working People Across the Country, Strongly Support the H eroic Efforts o f the D etroit N ew spaper Workers and Their Fam ilies. We Strongly believe in JUSTICE, FAIR­NESS, AND THE RIGHT OF A FREE PRESS.

Sam T. HartBusiness Manager

I U O ELocal 324

and it ’s m em b ers“We support Detroit newspaper workers in their struggle for

a fair contract.”

SoUdtVtittfyThe Executive Board & Membership ofU A W L o c a l 2 2continue their support of the Locked-Out Newspaper Workers

U.A.W. LOCAL 36WIXOM, MICHIGAN

r MEMBERSHIP, LEADERSHIP A N D [■RETIREE w il l c o n t i n u e t o

SUPPORT THE NEWSPAPER WORKERS A N D THE K

SUNDAY JOURNAL (

JUSTICE, DIGNITY AND RESPECT

ICME.ht the public service

LiOCAL 1346Warren Consolidated Schools

Send our support to Newspaper V Workers in Their Struggle

Boilermakers Local #169Supports the

Sunday Journal and the Detroit Newspaper

W orkers.

cv‘i

MANCINI, SCHREUDER, KLINE, and CONRAD, P.C.

For 23 Years, Attorneys Representing Injured W orkers and Their Fam ilies

We Support Your Right To Fight For Dignity and Justice

28225 Mound Rd., Warren, MI (810)751-3900

The Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employessy % Continues to support the Detroit Newspaper Workers

and salute them for their stand against corporate greed.

President: M. A. FLEMING Sec. Treasurer: W. E. LaRUE

The Executive Board, staff and m em bership of

Team sters Local No. 299 proudly support the

Newspaper Workers in their struggle for justice

“An injury to one is an injury to all’

Donald G. Smith President

A n i n j u r y

TO ONE IS AN INJURY TO ALL!The m em bers & officers of the Transportation Com m unications Union stand with the new spaper workers in Detroit.

I n S o l id a r it y !

R obert A . Scardelietti International President

PAGE 26

RATES1 Week: $1°° per word.2 Weeks: $200 per word.3 Weeks: $300 per word.4 Weeks for the price of 3!

($10 Minimum Charge)

AnniversariesChildhood Sweethearts celebrate their 65th wedding anniversary. Congratulations to Frank and Vivian Skvarce from Rudy and Helen Bernick

GET INVOLVED IN THE LABOR PARTY! IT COULD

CHANGE YOUR LIFE!The Labor Party truly represents a chance for a better life for all working people. Call us at (248) 788-6528 or write us at the Detroit Metro Chapter of the Labor Party, P.O. Box 39192, Redford, Ml 48239.

Come to a forum sponsored by the Labor Party and ACOSS on Monday, June 15, 6:30 p.m. in the back room of the Anchor Bar, 450 West Fort Street, Detroit. Hear Bob Irminger tell his story and the story of the Neptune Jade and the Liverpool dockers. Also plan to attend the next Labor Party meeting, Friday, August 7 at 7 p.m. at the UNITE Union Hall on Howard, just west of Trumbull. Come and join dedicated people trying to improve the lives of all of us.

Bids

JUNE 7, 1998

CALL(313) 964-5655

extension #120 & C H ARG E IT!

FRANK and VIVIAN SKVARCE Happy 65th Wedding Anniversary!

You’re the best. — T o m fifi

AnnouncementsFITNESS FUND-RAISER

Detroit Pistons guard Lindsay Hunter will be the grand marshall for the 15th annual Fitness Challenge, a fund-raiser for the United Negro College Fund, on Saturday at Belle Isle. The event begins at 8 a.m. and includes walking, running, in-line skating and biking. Registration is $10. The challenge is sponsored by the Detroit Inter-Alumni Council of the UNCF. For more information on registration or pledges, call (313) 834-4286 or 965-5550.____________

SUPPORT THE AUSTRALIAN DOCK WORKERS

For more information, see http://www.users.bigpond.com/

takver/soapbox/index.htm

Susan Whitall, formerly of the Detroit Sunday Journal, will sign her new book,

“The Women of Motown” at the following sites:

Tuesday, June 9,1998 at 8:00 p.m. Barnes & Noble Booksellers, Telegraph Road, S. of Maple in Bloomfield Twp. Special guest to be announced.Monday, June 8, at 7:30 p.m., Downtown Birmingham Border’s. Wednesday, July 1, from 12 p.m. to 2 p.m., L & L Books in the PenobscotBuilding, Downtown Detroit._______The winner of the Las Vegas Contest is Michael Clark of Southfield. His sponsor was UAW Local 140 member Red Davis.

Wayne County Community Collegeis soliciting bids for sidewalk repairs at its Western Campus. A bid package may be picked up at W CCC-Purchasing Department, 801 W. Fort, Detroit, Ml 48226. Bids are due Thursday, June 18,1998 by 2 p.m. For more information, call (313) 496-2594.

BirthdaysHappy Birthday, Baby

(Kelly Luce)!— Love, Dad

Happy Birthday to our son Rudy, Jr. and our grandson, Darrow, from Rudy and Helen Bernick.

CongratulationsA graduation congratulation to Melissa Jo Rusnell, class of ’98, Stevenson High School, Livonia, Michigan. Wow, five awards! Work well done. — your family

Announcement — Garage Sale

STOP! • SHOP! • BUY! —ROYAL O A K -

ANTIQUE & GARAGE SALE

Center Street Parking Structure 350 Dealers and Vendors

July 18 & 19 110,000 sq. ft. — 3 Levels

(248) 547-4000 Swap your collectibles

Outdoor spaces available

Financial

INCOMEUNLIM ITED

Making MONEY from home has never been easier!

• No Experience Necessary! • No Selling Required!

THE MOST POWERFUL INCOME OPPORTUNITY IN THE UNITED STATES

Advanced Telecom Systems provides you w ith

all the tools you need to be successful!

C a ll T o d ay! (800) 382-2712 Ext. 1709-4051

Health

CARPET — Wayne County Commu­nity College District is soliciting bids for the Carpet Replacement at our Administration Office — Western Campus (Bid #000397). Bid package can be obtained from this location between 9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m./M-F and from June 8-19, 1998, 801 West Fort Street, Detroit, Ml 48226. Contact Charles Jones at (313) 496-2781.

“DEAD DOCTORS DON’T LIE” T.J. C lark ’s Original Mineral Form ula™ . The best organic, colloidal, trace mineral supplement s ince 1925. Lowest prices! Satisfaction guaranteed! Ask about free delivery.

$19.95/qt., $60/gal.Call Richard, (313) 584-7525

Help WantedDriver — School Bus Inner-city driver needed for six hours daily. $9/hr. plus health benefits. Field trips and charters expand hours beyond 30 per week. Requirements are CDL-B license plus DOT card. Call (313) 361-5382 today.

Immediate openings. Nationwide industrial service company seeks customer-oriented professionals in the Detroit area. Responsibilities include operation of straight trucks and assisting in field operations as needed. Competitive wages, full benefits. Class B CDL required. Call (800) 839-8005, ext. 401, or FAX (330) 456-3247, Attn. Recruiting.

Legal Secretary needed for Downtown Detroit union side labor firm. Good communication, organi­zation, computer skills, Word Perfect experience necessary. Nice building, all conveniences, free parking. Fax resume to (313) 963-7123, Attn: Ann.

Legal Secretary needed full-time for Southfield law firm special­izing in union side labor law. Two to five years of experience required. Send resume to:Jane Aula, 400 Galleria Officentre,

Suite 117, Southfield, Ml 48034

Legal Secretary — Union side labor law firm in downtown Detroit seeks experienced legal secretary with exceptional organization and com­munication skills. Typing speed — 65 wpm and verifiable references required. Submit credentials to:

P.O. Box 40483 Redford, Ml 48240

WANTED: Receptionist with a smiling voice, typing ability and law office experience. Location in downtown Detroit. We have a high security parking lot adjacent to the office. The usual benefits, a good starting salary and a nice place to work. Send resume to:

P.O. Box 40483 Redford, Ml 48240

Sales — Looking for 30 people interested in selling state-of-the-art cosmetics. No experience neces- sary. Call Barb at (313) 640-4895.

Salesperson. Zalla’s Wide Shoes. Experience preferred, or will train. Three or Four days per week. Recent retirees from Teamsters Local 372 welcome. (734) 421-5610. Ask for John or Shirley.

Misc. For SaleGOOD & P LE N TY

RESALE SHOP SUMMER CLOTHING

IS HERE!Household and Baby Furniture

and MattressesSpecializing in Women’s Plus Sizes

30-Day Layaway M on.-Sat. x / ^ /10 a .m .-5 p.m . ^

22660 Van Dyke3 blocks south of 9 M ile /

(810) 754-7310

ROYAL OAK BOOKSU S E D A N D RARE28806 Woodward Avenue Royal Oak, Ml 48067-0941

(248) 545-6510Proprietors:Ed and Pat Jonas Hours:M on.-Sat.: 10a.m . to 7p .m . Sun.: 12 noon to 5 p.m.

SWEATSHIRTS AND MORE!

“NO SCAB PAPERS”Sweatshirts $20.00Tee Shirts $14.00Designer Mugs $8.50Designer Hats $7.50Mouse Pads $9.95Gift Baskets $20.00

All prices include taxes, shipping and handling

Bob’s Graphic & Design Co. 9319 Caprice Drive Plymouth, Ml 48170

(734) 459-0635

T-SHIRTS,MUGS CAPSwith the DTU Local 18seal and logo.Colors are gold and green on a rich black background.Shirts $9, caps $6, mugs $5

Proceeds go to the Detroit Printers Club Call (313) 963-0109

ZALLA’S WIDE SHOES

Men’s and Ladies’ Dress,Casual and Tennis Shoes. Discount to Locked-out Workers

(313) 421-5610

Chuck Lozen — Get well soon. Your friends at The Detroit Sunday Journal

Don’t hold your breath for an NLRB decision. It may take a while longer. Only last week they ruled against the tactics of Ford’s Harry Bennett and his goons at the Rouge Plant. There are about 900,000 cases in front of ours. Collusional corporate interests wouldn’t have it any other way!

Rebecca: A great rally and a great evening at the A n ch o r. . . only next time, let’s don’t tell the other 998 where we’re going. — G.

Music makes our movement grow! Congratulations to Journal supporter and musician Mikael Elsila, who leaves Detroit for New York City next week to become a full-time organiz­er for American Federation of Musicians Local 802. Like Pete Seeger says — “Workers Win When Labor Sings!”

GROSSE POINTERS:Help support the Locked-out

Newspaper Workers!Call our Hotline at

(313) 222-7654 for information and yard signs!

Misc. WantedFAX machine. The Creekside Development Corporation, a non­profit community organization, is in drastic need of a FAX machine! Cheap, cheap or a donation would be greatly appreciated. Contact Ann at (313) 823-5434._______________

Simple, basic phonograph wanted for purchase. Just like we used in the old days to play records. Call between 8-4 weekdays (313) 926-5581. Ask for Mrs. Flowers.

Wanted — Donated computers. Detroit Sunday Journal for Display Advertising. 486 or better. Call John at (313) 964-5655 ext. 132.

Wanted — Back issues of Internet Underground magazine. Call John at (313) 525-5510.

Mixed MessagesNOTE: The opinions expressed in Mixed Messages are those of advertisers and do not necessarily reflect Sunday Journal views or policies.

The Detroit Sunday Journal — 931 days without anyone being fired for protected union activity!

. . . and free parking too!

Is it wise that STREET CRIMES are considered a real threat to society — but not CORPORATE CRIMES?

Belleville/New Boston AreaGET YOUR LAWN SIGNS!

_________ (313) 753-4033_________

Randy, Judge O’Meara says Labor Day is a bad day for him.

WAYNE COUNTY PURCHASING DIVISION600 RANDOLPH STREET

D E T R O IT , M ICHIGAN 48226 W(313)224-7796 ^

INVITATION FOR BIDfor

GVWR Diesel Engine Driven Truck with Telescopic Hydraulic Aerial Tower and

Fiberglass Utility Body for

Wayne County Department of Public Services Equipment Division

29900 Goddard Road Romulus, Ml 48174

Bid Date: Friday, June 19,1998 Time: 3:00 p.m.CONTROL #98-37-210

INVITATION FOR BIDfor

Collecting, Hauling and Transportation of Incinerator Grit and Screening

forWayne County Department of Environment

Wyandotte Wastewater Treatment Plant 797 Central Avenue

Wyandotte, Ml 48192 Bid Date: Monday, June 22,1998 Time: 2:30 p.m.CONTROL #98-37-239

INVITATION FOR BIDfor

Various Batteries for

Wayne County Department of Public Services Inventory Section

Central Maintenance Yard 29900 Goddard Road

Romulus, Ml 48174 Bid Date: Friday, June 19,1998 Time: 2:30 p.m.CONTROL #98-37-240

INVITATION FOR BIDfor

Office Supplies for

Wayne County Department of Management and Budget

Stockroom 600 Randolph St.Detroit, Ml 48226

Bid Date: Monday, June 22,1998 Time: 2:00 p.m.CONTROL #98-37-238

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALSTo Perform

Operational and Quality Control Audits Project T-9802

The City of Detroit Department of Transportation (DDOT) requests sealed proposals to Perform Operational and Quality Control Audits. Sealed proposals must be received by the Detroit Department of Transportation, Purchasing/Contract Administration Division, 1301 E. Warren Avenue, Detroit, Ml 48207 on or before 4:00 p.m. (EST) June 29, 1998. THERE WILL BE NO PUBLIC OPENING OF THE PROPOSALS. A Pre-Proposal Conference is scheduled for 2:00 p.m. on June 10, 1998 in DDOT’s Administration Building, 1301 E. Warren Avenue, Detroit, Ml 48207.

Proposals are to be in accordance with the Request for Proposals (RFP) dated May 29, 1998, which includes a Disadvantaged Business Enterprise (DBE) goal of 25%. Proposals received after 4:00 p.m. June 29, 1998 will be returned unopened to the sender. No proposal, once submitted, may be withdrawn for 90 days after the due date.

The successful proposer will comply with all applicable federal, state and local laws and regulations. This includes, but is not limited to, all applicable Equal Employment Opportunity laws and U.S. Department of Transportation Disadvantaged Business Enterprise regulations as outlined in the RFP.

The City of Detroit Department of Transportation reserves the right to postpone, accept or reject any or all proposals, in whole or in part, on such basis as it deems necessary and in its best interest to do so, subject to the rules and regulations set forth by the City of Detroit, the U.S. Department of Transportation and the Federal Transit Administration. Firms or individuals whose names appear on the U.S. Comptroller General’s list of ineligible contractors will not be considered.

The City of Detroit Department of Transportation affirmatively assures that no proposer will be discriminated against on the basis of race, color, sex, age, disability, religion, ancestry, marital status, national origin, place of birth or sexual preference.

A copy of the RFP may be obtained by either writing to the aforemen­tioned address or by calling Pamela L. Crump, the Contract Administrator at (313) 833-5676.

Karmun P. Newby, Materials Manager Purchasing/Contract Administration Division

JUNE 7, 1998

RATES1 Week: $1°o per word.2 Weeks: $2°o per word.3 Weeks: $300 per word.4 Weeks for the price of 3!

($10 Minimum Charge)

G u ilty : Tony R idder cou ld not explain why he d estro y ed so m any lives. S o he just w alked off the s tag e . G et out of our town! — Paul

P auline W ohlford, you alw ays go the ex tra mile for the locked-out w orkers, but your jum ping in for u s at the Sum m it helped u s out of an em b a rra ss in g jam . W e w on’t forget again , and w e thank you from the bottom of our h earts.

Let him w allpaper your kitchen while w e paint the town.

__________ PAGE 27

CALL[313) 964-5655

extension #120 & CHARGE IT!

M arty, Joe, and Beefcake(B eefcake?) — Electricians, Local 58 — Thanks for your supportive stance on behalf of the Detroit Locked-out N ew spaper W orkers, and the Detroit Sunday Journal at one of your recent thirst-quenching stops at B rosnan’s in the Park. — Ann

Is the Lock-out over?W hat’s going on? W here’s the

action? Call (810) 447-2716 for la test updates.

Solidarity!

SERVICE DIRECTORYBusiness Services

☆ W ED D IN G INVITATIONS ^All item s d iscoun ted . S am ple

a lbum s delivered. 20-album choice Call A gnes E. Jo h n so n

(248) 588-3764

M aintenance and Repair

PAINTING — W O O D Y ’S PAINT & HAN D YM AN SERVICES

Free e stim a te s for m any types of hom e repair. P rofessional

indoor/outdoor painting Locked-out N ew spaper W orker

Call (313) 941-1063

A dvanced W ild Anim al C ontrolH um ane Live Trapping, R elocation and Prevention D ays (810) 242-0892 Evenings (248) 478-0493 L icensed - Insured

W ET PLASTER AND DRYW ALL REPAIR

E ast Lafayette community. W ater d a m a g e , c ra c k s , ho les. P ro ­fessional, insured. F ast, neat, and c lean! 25 y e a rs ex p erien ce . Call Mike Sifter at (734) 729-2665.

VIN C E FURNARI CEM ENTR epair work or new construction driveway, po rches, patio s idew alks. Call for a free e stim ate , licensed and insured , e as ts id e , so m e w est.

(810) 465-5172

D ECK LO OKING OLD? C lean Sw eep Pow er W ashing

M akes any d eck look new! Free sea lan t. Excellent ra te s . Locked-out Worker. W est side. (313) 937-3609.

CALL STRIKELINE SERVICESfor total deck restoration,

power washing, sealing and staining! Always free estim ates and fair prices.

Locked-out N ew spaper Worker W est side. Call (313) 408-0685

B U D ’S PAINTINGQuality work a t re a so n ab le prices

R eferen ces available Interior and Exterior

(810) 977-2941

A-1 PAINTING QUALITY W ORKR easonab le ra tes, free estim ates, re fe ren ces . W estern W ayne and Oakland Counties.

Call Mark a t (313) 531-7824

Personal Service

J T ’S PAINTING AND H AN D YM AN SERVICE

Industrial and R esidential Painting. In terior an d Exterior. Spring C lean-U p. D eck R efinishing and P ow er W ashing. F ree E stim ates and S en io r D iscounts.

(810) 791-4165

MASSEURWhy dream about it!

Indulge yourself in a soothing, quenching fantasy. Let my expert

h an d s aggressively calm life’s ten sio n s, s tre sse s!

24-hour service For all o ccasions (313) 881-6460

Advertise your business in the Sunday Journal Service Directory. Call today!(313) 964-5655 ext. 120

LE GALBANKRUPTCY

$195 TOTAL ATTORNEY FEE(810) 398-5000

Form er UAW Attorney

ELLIS BOAL925 Ford Building

(313) 962-2770 Ellis B oal@ aol.com

PAUL H. STEVENSONAttorney at Law

Criminal D efense , P e rso n a l Injury 4632 2nd Ave.

Call (313) 833-6868

MARTIN A. SCOTTJo b Discrimination • R ace •

Sex • Age • Disability Form er EEOC Attorney

and Union Stew ard Mr. Scott volunteers

weekly to sell the Detroit Sunday Journal

m scott@ m aslaw .com 400 W. M aple, Birmingham, M

(248) 642-6020

LAW OFFICES OF JANADIA & JANADIA

Union-friendly a tto rneys Criminal - P e rsona l Injury

W ayne and M acom b C ounties only (810) 776-0810

To place an ad in Legal Services,

Call (313) 964-5655

ext. 120

“B ased on com passion and love for all humanity, and a belief that a small minority should not hold the majority of wealth, socialism is not about one rule for all, a colorless world, but abou t allowing each individual the a c c e s s to develop their own unique skills and character, thus benefitting the com m unity a s a w hole.” You go, Karl! Prole Biff.

GENE and JANICE AUSTIN

from UAW L o ca l 594support

the Locked-out Newspaper Workers

UNION SUPPORTERSWanted to sponsor a union solidarity truck. Several hundred union sup­porters are needed to pledge $10-$25/year to defray costs, i.e. purchase, insurance, plates and repairs. This truck will be a go-anywhere sound and supply vehicle that will be used to support picket lines, rallies, food banks, the Sunday Journal, etc. Make checks payable to ACOSS Truck Fund, 5587 Stephens Rd., Warren, MI 48091. For more information, con­tact A1 Benchich, (810) 759-4320 or Steve Waskul, (810) 754-0227.

Yesterday,Tomorrow

“SOLIDARITY”United for Justice UAW Local 372

Trenton, Ml The Membership, Leadership and

Retirees of UAW Local 372

Playing a Round by Merl Reagle6/7/98

1

PU ZZLE NOTE: 29 Violin apertures 60 Arroyo 89 Come upSome squares in this 30 Something to 62 Done with 90 Butt headspuzzle may come up peek through difficulty 93 Unspokenempty. 31 Corporate raider 64 Lear’s eldest 95 Ace

Pickens 65 Animal-fat worry 97 CollegeACROSS 32 Stories 67 Castles roommate of

34 Historic time 68 Cooking, Tommy Lee1 Golf grp. 35 Get on (a horse) Louisiana-style Jones5 Golf score 36 Tiny opening 72 Viet village, 98 Dumb bunny8 Newman role 39 Together Dien B ien___ 101 Vermin access

11 Your cheatin’ art 42 A devil of a place 73 Slippery trees 102 Yell15 Song of praise 43 Year-end extra 74 Organ-pipe 103 Snares16 Start of a 44 Diplomacy opening 104 Office furniture

Volcano island 46 Camry’s sister 75 Java hut 108 What this puzzle17 Petroleum giant 49 Attacks 76 Explosion’s has20 Part of B&O 50 Does a patching result 110 Stopovers21 Taverns job 78 Spelunking sites 111 Hit, in the Bible23 Doors to the 53 Artist Mondrian 79 Be aware of 112 Drop off a cigar

underworld? 54 Entrance to a beforehand 113 Training estabs.25 Bathroom buy, small tunnel 82 Roof-rack tie-ons 114 Popular rum

Soap-on-___ 55 Large, for one 83 Cringe brand26 Guy on a moray 56 ___Robinson 84 Whale feature 115 Hush-hush org.

foray 57 Dramatist Edward 85 Rice et al. 116 No longer active:28 Russia’s ___ 59 Henry VIII’s 88 ___the crack of abbr.

Mountains sextet dawn 117 Road hazard

DOWN

1 Sister of Michael and Janet

2 Speakeasy-door feature

3 Train station, in France

4 Cuckoobird5 Shelve

indefinitely6 Tons and tons7 Ex-Cleveland

Indian A18 Deli meat9 Pulp Fiction first

name10 Certain pastry

centers11 Old Brit, coin12 Kitchen VIP13 Vent14 It grows on trees15 Peeling tool18 Severe intestinal

disease19 City of N central

Florida21 Stop sleeping22 Star cluster24 Corrida shouts27 Lies at rest31 Road-use fee33 Satisfy totally35 Lethal Weapon

first name37 Way behind,

gambling-wise38 Aficionado40 “How’d ya know

i t ?”41 It’s dealt face

down in stud poker

42 Monopoly buys43 Did a hay job45 Pins for oars46 Tax preparer:

abbr.47 Cruet content48 Bluecoat rival49 Crude abode50 Some bills51 Atom or equal

ending52 Adapted to dry

climates54 Paintings by Joan55 House swallower

after a rain58 Consumed59 Timber flaw

60 Crucifixes61 Neither light nor

matter can escape from it

63 Van Damme’s country: abbr.

64 Dead duck65 “I ’m Every

W oman” singer Khan

66 Use as a hideout67 Girder features69 Actress Hooks70 Something in the

air71 Updated72 Film ratings74 Muted-trumpet

sound77 “ he cute?”78 Person with a

baton79 Statue base80 American Beauty81 Flock member83 Carve, as a

pumpkin84 Carried (here)86 Helmet opening87 Loads89 M ake___

(complainpublicly)

90 No place for a square peg

91 T-shirt features92 Army chow94 Thing96 “ A

Symphony”97 “Super!”98 Lose traction99 Part of A.D.

100 Noted Quaker103 A rt___105 Abbr. after a

lawyer’s name106 Chess pees.107 Briny expanse109 Dance like Hines

Solution on page 28

* G IF T G IV E R S ! Too rd e r an y o f M e r l’s cro ssw o rd co llec tio n s, se n d $ 1 0 p e r book (checks on ly , p a y a b le to " P u zzleW orks" ) to: C ro ssw o rd s , P .O . B ox I5 0 6 6 -D , Tam pa FL 3 3 6 8 4 . P le a se sp ecify Vol. 1 .2 , 3 , 4 , o r 5.

PAGE 28 THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL JUNE 7, 1998

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGon

PROPOSED ORDINANCE TO AMEND CHAPTER 13, ARTICLE V, OF THE 1984 DETROIT CITY CODE BY

AMENDING SECTION 13-5-1, TO CHANGE THE DATE FROM JULY 1ST THROUGH OCTOBER 1ST, AS THE

DATE, BEGINNING WITH THE YEAR 1998, BY WHICH ANY CITY EMPLOYEE W HO IS GOVERNED BY

THIS ARTICLE SHALL BE PRECLUDED FROM ACCUMULATING MORE THAN FORTY

(40) VACATION DAYSNotice is hereby given that a Public Hearing will be held by the City Council of Detroit, Michigan, in the City Council’s Committee Room, 13th Floor of the City-County Building on FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1998 AT 10:00 A.M., at which time all interested persons are invited to be present and be heard as to their views on the above proposed ordi­nance amendment described as follows:

SUMMARY

PROPOSED ORDINANCE TO AMEND CHAPTER 13, ARTICLE V, OF THE 1984 DETROIT CITY CODE BY AMENDING SECTION 13-5-1 TO CHANGE THE DATE FROM JULY 1ST THROUGH OCTOBER 1ST, AS THE DATE, BEGINNING WITH THE YEAR 1998 BY WHICH ANY CITY EMPLOYEE WHO IS GOVERNED BY THIS ARTICLE SHALL BE PRE­CLUDED FROM ACCUMULATING MORE THAN FORTY (40) VACA­TION DAYS; TO EXCLUDE VACATION TIME THAT IS EARNED BETWEEN JULY 1ST AND SEPTEMBER 30TH FROM THE MAXIMUM OF FORTY (40) VACATION DAYS THAT SUCH CITY EMPLOYEES ARE PRECLUDED FROM ACCUMULATING ON OCTOBER 1ST OF THE SAME YEAR; AND TO DELETE LANGUAGE WHICH ALLOWED CITY EMPLOYEES WHO WERE GOVERNED BY THIS ARTICLE AND WORKED FOR THE DETROIT HOUSING COMMISSION TO EXCEED FORTY (45) VACATION DAYS ON JULY 1ST IN THE YEAR 1996 ONLY.

Copies of this ordinance are available in the Office of the City Clerk, 200 City-County Building.

Jackie L. Currie City Clerk

NOTICE TO THE HEARING IMPAIRED: If you would like a sign language interpreter to be present at this public hearing, please call the Council’s Research and Analysis Division at 224-4946 at least 48 hours before the scheduled hearing time.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGon Proposed Ordinance to Amend Chapter 61 by

Amending District Map 41 toRezone Property in Area of W. Fort Street,Fischer Fwy. Scotten and W. Grand Blvd.

Notice is hereby given that a public hearing will be held by the City Council of Detroit, Michigan, in the Committee Room, 13th Floor of the City-Council Building on MONDAY, JUNE 15, 1998 at 10:30 a.m., at which time all interested persons are invited to be present and be heard as to their views on the above proposed ordinance amendment described as follows:

SUMMARY

Proposed Ordinance to amend Chap. 61 of the 1984 Detroit City Code, the Official Zoning Ordinance of the City of Detroit, being Ordinance No. '390-G as amended, by amending Article XV, District Map No. 41, to show a B6 (General Services District) zoning classifi­cation where B4 (General Commercial District) and R5 (Medium Density Residential District) zoning classifications currently exist on property generally bounded by West Fort Street, the Fischer Fwy., Scotten, and West Grand Blvd.

Copies of the ordinance are available in the Office of the City Clerk, Room 200, City County Building during regular business hours.

Jackie L. Currie Detroit City Clerk

NOTICE TO THE HEARING IMPAIRED: If you would like a sign lan­guage interpreter to be present at this public hearing, please call the Council’s Research and Analysis Division at 224-4946 at least 48 hours before the scheduled hearing time.

The Officers, Members and Retirees of

UAW Local 9 0 9support the Locked-out

Newspaper Workers We encourage

all working people to continue to boycott

the scab papers and USA Today!

UAW Local 2093The power of UNION is found in WE, not ME. We support the newspaper workers in their quest for a fa ir and equitable contract.

- Three Rivers American Axle and Manufacturing Facility

Publications X

PrayersThank you, St. Jude, for favors granted. — Art B.

LABOR NOTESPutting the movement back in the labor movement.Want to know what’s going on in labor today? Keep up-to-date by reading Labor Notes’ monthly maga­zine. Besides informative articles we offer strategies and resources to help workers fight back.

The third edition of

“Voices of the Strike”is now available. Expanded and

deepened, now 128 pages, it includes over sixty voices from all

unions represented in the Detroit Newspaper Strike and

over sixty duotones by Locked-out Free Press

photographer George Waldman

Send $25 to:George Waldman

P.O. Box 1273, Detroit, Ml 48231

Now Available“Christianity

Beyond Creeds”by Harry T. Cook

This 136-page book is a radical restatement of Christian beliefs in concepts and language of today. Harry T. Cook is an Episcopal priest whose columns have appeared in the Detroit Sunday Journal.

$14 includes shipping Send check or money order to: Center for Rational Christianity

_ P.O. Box 182,1 Clawson, Ml 48017

I— . J Also at Paperbacks Unlimited

22834 Woodward, Ferndale

THE CHAIN GANG, One Newspaper

versus the Gannett Empire

by Richard McCord The book Gannett doesn’t

want you to read!Get your copy today!

S end a ch e ck fo r $27.45, m ade ou t to: Metropolitan Council of

Newspaper Unions “The Chain Gang”

450 W. Fort, Detroit, Ml 48226 Get your order in today to help

the locked-out workers!

Real Estate

House for Sale

Largest selection of Repossessions and pre-owned Manufactured homes in the Metro suburban area.

0 down, low paymentsCall Statewide Homes at 1 (800) 732-0232 (sales tax due at closing).

Cottage for Sale

Lake Michigan/Portage Lake. Three rentals. Very clean, dock, sandy beach. Beautiful area. Call (616) 889-3415.

Hall for Rent

UAW Local 247Hall for every occasion

15 Mile and Van Dyke area (810) 264-2945

Used Vehicles1987 Plymouth Caravelie. Original owner. New tires, well maintained. $1200/best offer. Call (810) 264-8127.

/ / PLACE," SHOW, and WINw ith a Classified Ad in . . .

Si''“slaws

fUNDAY JOURNAL$1 a word for 1 week • $2 a word for 2 weeks •

$3 a word for 3 weeks($10 minimum charge)

Date(s) you want your ad to run: Sunday,__________________________Run ad for: □ 1 Week O 2 Weeks □ 3 Weeks O 4 Weeks Heading?: (Help Wanted, For Sale, Mixed Messages, Services etc.)Exact wording of your ad:_______________________________________

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M a il to: The Detroit Sunday Journal, Classified Department

450 W. Fort St., Detroit, MI 48226 Or Fax your ad to: (313) 964-5554

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SUBSCRIBETO THE

DETROIT SU N D A Y

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JOURNAL(313 ) 964-5655

£ao

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<3cmc

n v o s6/7/98 © 1998 by M. Reagle

WORDY GURDY1. San Antonio player’s stoles (1)

I I I I I ■ I I I I2. Time-out foir birthday food (1)fiday ioi

f T a3- Velocity of Samoa’s Margaret (1 )

B Y T R IC K Y R IC K Y KAJME Every answer is a rhyming pair of words (like EAT CAT and DOUBLE TROUBLE), and they will fit in the letter squares. The number after definition tells you how many syllables in each word.

4. Wash basin pitcher watcher (2)l pitcher watcher (2)

■ I I I I I I5. Idle talk l>y mad Wonderland character (2)

1998 United Feature Synd ica te , inc

6. Discoverer of a lost watch Key (2)

7. Slaughterhouse’s bad risks (2)

saiawvo saiawrvHs i aaaNM aaaMiM -» mmaxvhd aaxtvH s HiMMiA aaMa t aaaas avaw t; Mvana ;>imvo r. sana sanas t

SH5IMSNV

JUNE 7, 1998 THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL PAGE 29

Sunday wrap

T his w eekSun. Mon. Tue. Wed. Thu. Fri. Sat.

7 8 9 10 11 12 13Mil Hou j Hou Hou KC KC2:05 7:05 7:05 7:05F 8:05 8:05

Fox-C Fox-C |Fox-C Fox-C 50 50

1 Was Was Was8:00 8:00 8:00

| 2 , 9 ESP, 9 ESP, 9

Home games are shaded.

WESTERN CONFERENCEDetroit vs. Dallas

(Red Wings win, 4-2)Detroit 2, Dallas 0 Dallas 3, Detroit 1 Detroit 5, Dallas 3.Detroit 3, Dallas 3.Dallas 3, Detroit 2 (0T)Detroit 2, Dallas 0

EASTERN CONFERENCEWashington vs. Buffalo

(Capitals win, 4-2)Buffalo 2, Washington 0 Washington 3, Buffalo 2 (OT) Washington 4, Buffalo 3 (OT) Washington 2, Buffalo 0 Buffalo 2, Washington 1 Washington 3, Buffalo 2

y.STANLEY CUP FINALS

Washington vs. Detroit/DallasTuesday: at Detroit, 8:00 Thursday: at Detroit, 8:00 Saturday: at Washington, 8:00 June 16: at Washington, 8:00 If necessary June 18: at Detroit, 8:00 June 20: at Washington, 8:00 June 23: at Detroit, 8:00

FINALSChicago vs. Utah (Series tied, 1-1)

Utah 88, Chicago 85 (OT) Friday:Chicago 93, Utah88 Today: at Chicago, 7:30 Wednesday: at Chicago, 9:00 Friday: at Chicago, 9:00 If necessary June 14: at Utah, 7:30 June 17: at Utah, 9:00

1 3 n j f j J B IBAMERICAN LEAGUEEast W L Pet. GBNew York 41 13 .759 —

Boston 34 23 .596 8.5Toronto 30 29 .508 13.5Baltimore 28 31 .475 15.5Tampa Bay 25 33 .431 18Central W L Pet. GBCleveland 35 23 .603 —

Minnesota 26 31 .456 8.5Chicago 24 33 .421 10.5DETROIT 21 34 .382 12.5Kansas City 21 36 .368 13.5West W L Pet. GBTexas 35 23 .603 —

Anaheim 31 26 .544 3.5Seattle 26 33 .441 9.5Oakland 24 33 .421 10.5

NATIONAL LEAGUEEast W L Pet. GBAtlanta 42 18 .700 —

New York 31 23 .574 8Philadelphia 26 30 .464 14Montreal 22 36 .379 19Florida 17 41 .293 24Central W L Pet. GBHouston 35 23 .603 —

Chicago 34 24 .586 1St. Louis 29 29 .500 6Milwaukee 28 28 .500 6Pittsburgh 29 30 .492 6.5Cincinnati 27 33 .450 9West W L Pet. GBSan Diego 37 23 .617 —

San Francisco 36 24 .600 1Los Angeles 29 30 .492 7.5Colorado 26 34 .433 11Arizona 19 41 .317 18

Wings leave the Stars behind

Round-by-round list of Detroit Tiger draft choices and Michigan players selected in the 1998 baseball draft.

(1st) 2-Oakland: Mark Mulder, Ihp, Michigan State; 14- Detroit: Jeff Weaver, rhp, Fresno State.

(Sandwich Pick) 34-Detroit: Nathan Cornejo, rhp, Wellington (Kans.) HS.

(2nd) 54-Montreal: Eric Good, rhp, Niles; 57-Detroit: Brandon Inge, ss, Virginia Commonwealth; 73-Detroit:

Adam Pettyjohn, Ihp, Fresno State. (3rd) 87-Detroit: Thomas Marx, Ihp, Birmingham Brother Rice HS; 95-

Seattle: Andrew Van Hekken, Ihp, Holland HS; 97-

Yankees: Drew Henson, 3b, Brighton HS.(4th) Detroit: Andres Torres, of, Miami Dade HS.(5th) Detroit: Gregory Peterson, of, St. John’s. (6th)

Detroit: Robert Sismondo, Ihp, Ohio Univ.(7th) San Diego: Brian Berryman, rhp, Michigan;

Texas: John Stewart, Ihp, Western Michigan; Detroit: Clinton Smith, rhp, Oklahoma.

(8th) Detroit: Barry Tolli, of, Newberry Park (CA) HS;

Arizona: Andrew Good, rhp, Rochester HS.(9th) Detroit: Donald Sevieri, of, Albuquerque (NM) El

Dorado HS.(10th) Detroit: William Rich, of, U. of Conn.(11th) Detroit: Thomas Taylor, ss, South Alabama(12th) Toronto: Eric Place, Ihp, Western Michigan;

Detroit: Russell Cleveland, c, Las Vegas (NV) Chaparral

HS.(13th) Detroit: Lazaro Gutierrez, Ihp, U. of Miami.

(14th) Texas: Derek Offevaere, 1B, Western Michigan; Detroit: Calvin Chipperfield, rhp, Australia; Seattle: Schuyler Doakes, ss, Jackson State (Detroit

native).(15th) Detroit: Cedric Brooks, c, Phenix City (Ala.)

Central HS.(16th) Detroit: Gregory Sain, 3B, West Torrance (CA)

HS.(17th) Minnesota: J.J. Putz, rhp, Michigan; Detroit:

William Nelson, ss, Santa Ana (CA) College.(18th) Detroit: Andrew Early, rhp, Shaker Heights (O)

HS.(19th) Milwaukee: Scott Geitz, rhp, Southwest

Michigan JC.Detroit: Galen Shea, rhp, Houston Baptist.

(20th) Detroit: James Hostetler, rhp, Fullerton (CA)

Coll.(21st) Detroit: Nathan Forbush, c, Utah.(22nd) Detroit: Ryan Earl, Ihp, Thousand Oaks (CA)

HS.(23rd) Detroit: William Madson, rhp, Carthage.(24th) Detroit: Thomas Koutouba, Ihp, Maine; Arizona:

Troy Neihaus, Ihp, Eastern Michigan.

(25th) Detroit: Derek Besco, of, Michigan.

(26th) Kansas City: Jeff Trzos, Ihp, North Farmington HS; Detroit: Craig Daluz, 3B, Fresno State.

(27th) Detroit: Jason Colquitt, c, East Carolina.

(28th) Detroit: Lacarlo Moore, cf, Xavier.(29th) Detroit: Scott Lawson, Ihp, Terre Haute (Ind.)

John Logan HS.(30th) Detroit: Keith Law, ss, Dekalb (III.) Coll.(31st) Detroit: Mack Paciorek, 3B, UCLA; Baltimore:

Sean Fisher, Ihp, Grand Rapids.(32nd) Kansas City: James Essian, c, Troy HS;

Detroit: Ronald Bush, ss, William & Mary.

(33rd) Detroit: Brian McGowan, rhp, Queens Coll. (34th) Detroit: Robert Stiehl, c, West Torrance (CA)

HS.(35th) Detroit: Joseph Yingling, c, Camarillo (CA) HS. (36th) Detroit: Scott Stuck, rhp, Climax-Scotts HS. (37th) Detroit: Antoine Cameron, of, Chino Hills (CA)

Ayala HS.(38th) Detroit: Edgar Varela, 3B, San Gabriel (CA) HS. (39th) Texas: Greg Ryan, Ihp, Eastern Michigan;

Detroit: Ryan Cox, Ihp, Southern Illinois.(40th) Detroit: David Mendez, of, Bronx (NY) Lehman

HS.(41st) Detroit: Christopher Tiller, rhp, Panola JC.

(42nd) Detroit: Kevin Estrada, ss, El Segundo (CA)

HS.(43rd) Oakland: Michael Cervenak, 3B, Michigan.

Detroit: Keith Perez, rhp, Holly HS.(44th) Detroit: Craig Bowser, of, Lufkin (TX) HS.

(45th) Detroit: Miles Luuloa, ss, Kaunakakai (HA)

Malokai HS.(46th) Detroit: Patrick Gil, rhp, Grandville (MO) HS. (47th) Detroit: Warren Trott, ss, West Torrance (CA)

HS.(48th) Detroit: Christopher Curry, c, Meridian (MS).

W IN G S , F r o m P a g e 32

“To get back to the finals after every­thing that’s happened in the past year is unbelievable,” said general manager Ken Holland, “It’s just a testament to the character and leadership we have in that dressing room.”

The Red Wings got Fedorov back in late February when they matched the offer sheet tendered to him by the Carolina Hurricanes and Chris Osgood has justified Holland’s faith in him when he traded Vernon. But the loss of Konstantinov could only be accounted for by extra effort from every single player,

“It was a lot tougher without Vlady,” said Martin Lapointe. “We were play­ing good defensively as a team.”

Despite Detroit leading the series 3-2 going into the game, Dallas had dictated the pace and flow of the con­tests since the second game. But with the opportunity to reach the Finals once again and not wanting to return to Dallas today for a Game 7, the Red Wings owned the ice from the opening face-off.

In the game’s first minutes Darren McCarty drilled Darryl Sydor into the boards behind Stars’ goaltender Eddie Belfour to set the tone physically.

And with Kris Draper serving a roughing penalty a little over six min­utes into the game, Larry Murphy

couch potato timeSUNDAY9 a.m., Tennis, French Open, men’s

final, Channel 4.10:30 a.m., Auto racing, NASCAR

Pontiac Excitement 400, ESPN2.12:30 p.m., Auto racing, Formula

One Grand Prix of Canada, Channel 9.

1:30 p.m., Baseball, Atlanta at Baltimore, TBS.

2 p.m., Women’s basketball, World Championship final, Channel 4.

2 p.m., Tigers, Detroit atMilwaukee, Fox Sports Detroit.

2:10 p.m., Baseball, Chicago White Sox at Cubs, WGN.

2:30 p.m., Auto racing, CART Detroit Grand Prix, Channel 7.

3 p.m., Golf, Kemper Open, final round, Channel 62.

3:30 p.m., Women’s golf, Michelob Light Classic, final round, ESPN2.

4:30 p.m., Auto racing, SCCA Trans-Am Motor City 100, TNN.

5 p.m., Auto racing, International Race of Champions, Channel 7.

5:30 p.m., Auto racing, Dayton Indy Lights Championship, ESPN2.

5:30 p.m., Senior golf, Nationwide Championship, ESPN.

7:30 p.m., NBA finals, Utah at Chicago, game 3, Channel 4.

8 p.m., Baseball, N.Y. Mets at Boston, ESPN.

8 p.m., Major League Soccer, New England at Los Angeles, ESPN2.

10 p.m., Boxing, junior welter­weight Zabdiel Judah vs. Mickey Ward, ESPN2.

MONDAY7 p.m., Tigers, Houston at Detroit,

Fox Sports Detroit.7:30 p.m., Arena football, New

Jersey at Orlando, ESPN2.7:35 p.m., Baseball, Boston at

Atlanta, TBS.

TUESDAY7 p.m., Tigers, Houston at Detroit,

Fox Sports Detroit.7:35 p.m., Baseball, Boston at

Atlanta, TBS.8 p.m., NHL, Stanley Cup finals,

Channels 2 and 9.9 p.m., Boxing, 12-round junior

middleweight bout, Tony Marshall vs. Darren Maciunski, USA.

WEDNESDAY11 a.m., World Cup soccer, Brazil

vs. Scotland, ESPN.2:30 p.m., World Cup soccer,

Morocco vs. Norway, ESPN.7 p.m., Tigers, Houston at Detroit,

Fox Sports Detroit.7:30 p.m., Baseball, Boston at

Atlanta, ESPN.9 p.m., NBA finals, Utah at

Chicago, game 4, Channel 4.THURSDAY11 a.m., World Cup soccer, Italy vs.

Chile, ESPN.2 p.m., Women’s golf, LPGA

Oldsmobile Classic, first round, ESPN.

4 p.m., Golf, Buick Classic, first round, USA.

7 p.m., Baseball, N.Y. Yankees at Montreal, Fox Sports Detroit.

8 p.m., NHL, Stanley Cup finals, Channel 9, ESPN.

showed why still one of the smartest and most effective defensemen in the NHL.

McCarty carried the puck over Dallas’ blue line down the left wing after taking a pass from Steve Yzerman with only Sergei Zubov back. Murphy saw this and immediately raced into the Dallas zone. McCarty then flipped a pass which the 18-sea­son veteran skated into. Murphy cut to the front of the net, made a little move and flipped a backhander past Belfour for a shorthanded goal and a 1-0 Red Wing lead 6:20 into the game.

The fans were also behind Osgood all the way. In what had to be one of the biggest group therapy sessions ever, the crowd started chanting, “Ozzy! Ozzy! Ozzy!” as soon as the players hit the ice just before the national anthem.

Now only the Capitals stand between the Red Wings and a second consecutive Stanley Cup.

“They have two scoring lines (includ­ing Peter Bondra whose 184 goals the past four seasons are the most in the NHL, former Red Wing Adam Oates, Joe Juneau and veteran Brian Bellows), they have some offensive players,” said Bob Rouse. “They’ve got a goaltender who’s been real hot (Olaf Kolzig) but we’ve got to concentrate on our game.”

8 p.m., Women’s basketball,WNBA, New York at Cleveland, Lifetime.

8 p.m., Major League Soccer, San Jose at Chicago, ESPN2.

10 p.m., World Cup soccer, teams tba, ESPN2.

FRIDAY8 a.m., World Cup soccer, Paraguay

vs. Bulgaria, ESPN2.11 a.m., World Cup soccer, Saudi

Arabia vs. Denmark, ESPN2.2 p.m., Women’s golf, LPGA

Oldsmobile Classic, second round, ESPN.

2:30 p.m., World Cup soccer, France vs. South Africa, ESPN2.

4 p.m., Golf, Buick Classic, second round, USA.

7 p.m., Baseball, Baltimore at Toronto, Channel 9.

7:30 p.m., Baseball, Chicago Cubs at Philadelphia, WGN.

7:35 p.m., Baseball, Montreal at Atlanta, TBS.

8 p.m., World Cup soccer, teams tba, ESPN2.

8 p.m., Tigers, Detroit at Kansas City, Channel 50.

9 p.m., NBA finals, Chicago at Utah, if necessary, Channel 4.

SATURDAY1 p.m., Baseball, Cleveland at

Yankees, Channel 2.2 p.m., Golf, Senior Classic,

Channel 4.3 p.m., Golf, Buick Classic, third

round, Channel 62.3 p.m., World Cup soccer, Belgium

vs. Netherlands, Channel 7.4 p.m., Women’s basketball,

WNBA, New York at Houston, Channel 4.

4 p.m., Women’s golf, LPGA Oldsmobile Classic, third round, ESPN.

7 p.m., Baseball, Montreal at Atlanta, TBS.

8 p.m., NHL, Stanley Cup finals, Channel 9, ESPN.

8 p.m., Tigers, Detroit at Kansas City, Channel 50.

JUNE 7; 1998 PAGE 3

Painting’s union message creates a furorBy Michael BetzoldJournal S ta ff Writer

When m anagers of an E aste rn M ichigan

University-affiliated con­ference center decided to

take down Brenda Everson’s paint­ing, they thought they were getting rid of a problem.

Instead they appear to have creat­ed a bigger one.

Labor groups are trying to organize a boycott of the Eagle C rest Conference Center in Ypsilanti, EMU academ ics are complaining about censorship, and Everson’s painting is getting far more attention than it did as p a rt of an unheralded student a rt exhibit a t Eagle Crest.

The painting, titled “The Union Fights Back,” features the face of a pig with dollar signs in its eyes and a green necktie w ith the le tte rs “Corporate Am erica.” A gainst the backdrop of an American flag, the watercolor also depicts Nike, child labor, poor m igrant workers and a horned devil labeled “NAFTA.” It shows a UAW-emblazoned hard hat, an upraised arm w ith the word “Solidarity” and pickets in front of the Detroit News building.

Eagle Crest officials say they got several complaints from clients, and an unnam ed m anager sum m arily removed the painting three days

after it was put up.“One of our clients said it

takes a slap a t m anage­m ent,” said M arcia Harrison-Harris, vice presi­dent of Eagle C rest M anagement Co.

“M anagem ent didn’t come here to be slapped.They paid big money to come here.

“Our primary obligation is to our clients who pay to use our facilities. We feel we m ust be sensitive to any­th ing th a t m akes them uncomfortable.”

Religious, educational, medical, labor and social groups also hold meetings a t the center, adjacent to the M arriott Hotel but not m anaged by M arriott.A sk ed how p r o - u n i o n clients might feel about the painting’s removal, Harrison- H arris said: “I’m certain we could risk losing their busi­ness.”

Some labor activists hope th a t’s ju s t w hat happens. The M ichigan chapter of Jobs With Justice, a national labor support net­work, is launching a boycott of Eagle Crest. The cen ter’s past clients reportedly have included the United

Journal photo by PATRICIA BECK

Brenda Everson said her painting didn’t get “an equal opportunity chance.”

Auto W orkers, the NAACP and University of Michigan’s Institute for Labor and Industrial Relations.

Everson, an administrative assis­tan t a t the EMU registrar’s office, says she didn’t intend the watercolor to be offensive.

“These are things we are being trained to do as artists, to make statem ents,” Everson said. “W hether they liked it or not, it’s still art. I’m unhappy about the censorship.”

EMU a rt professor Igor Beginin See PAINTING, P age 7

Delivering a message to postal workersA s locked-out new spaper

workers end a third incred­ible year of this struggle for justice, we can be thin- skinned sometimes.

Heck, we can be thin-skinned a lot of the time.

Like a doctor probing a suspicious lum p or swelling, we probe and explore every utterance about our labor dispute, searching for hidden meanings. For implications. Biases. Support.

We can find in one random phrase a beacon of hope. In another, we find a rock whose sharp edges cut us to the quick.

One would th ink th a t these years of uncertainty would have turned us into walking, talking tuning forks, ever sensitive to the concerns of union folk.

S usanWatso n

Sometimes we are; sometimes we aren’t. A few weeks back the Journal wasn’t.

We wrote an editorial tha t was intended to call attention to some of the problems caused by upper m an­agement in the U.S. Postal Service. It ran the same week as a postal workers’ protest in Royal Oak, a protest th a t locked-out newspaper workers supported and attended.

The Journal spoke of problems,

inefficiencies, cost increases and the time lag between regular mail and the blink-of-an-eye communication the Internet allows through the e-mail — when e-mail is working properly.

We didn’t m ean to offend our union brothers and sisters who handle all facets of the mail, but we did. We angered them. H urt their feelings.

And according to some of their let­ters. we betrayed them. Michael Smith of Clawson wrote: “As a sup­porter of the DSJ from the beginning and as a fellow unionist in solidarity w ith the locked-out new spaper union, I was shocked th a t an opinion from you would be so heavily laden with a slant normally reserved for ideological and business interests who would like nothing better than to see the PO go down the tube so they could skim the cream from our

service.”And Robert J. McLennan, presi­

dent of the Letter C arriers Union in Buffalo and western New York, tells us: ‘You can disagree with the rate hike request, ju s t don’t disparage the finest postal workers.” (The com­plete text of his letter is on Page 9 today.)

We wouldn’t dream of arguing with the letter writers. We accept responsibility for our words. We wish somehow we could roll back the clock and make the h u rt feelings go away. But we can’t.

All we can do is apologize for leav­ing the impression th a t we a t the Journal don’t appreciate the work done by postal union workers.

There’s one sure thing we can learn from this situation: When our friends hurt, so do we.V*’*V* W \ %**■J Y *'a Vt *

PAGE 30 THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL JUNE 7, 1998

Kozlov an unsung hero in playoffsBy P au l H arrisJournal S ta ff Writer

While he doesn’t get m uch attention because of his quiet nature and the attention paid to m any of his team ­mates, Slava Kozlov has been the best clutch perform er in the N ational Hockey League when it counts over the past four years.

In th a t time his 30 goals in the Stanley Cup Playoffs rank him fourth behind Claude Lemieux, Joe Sakic and Jarom ir Jagr. Kozlov’s 11 game-win­ning playoff goals put him a t the top of the list.

“This seems like the kind of year for Kozzy,” said Kirk Maltby. “He cranks it up and scores some big goals for us this time of year.”

This season Kozlov has six goals and seven assists with four game-winners. Like the Wings’ Brendan Shanahan, he is among only six players in NHL history to have scored two goals in the second overtime or later in a Stanley Cup Playoff game.

Kozlov’s first such goal came in

Game 5 of the 1995 W estern Conference Finals of June 11 against the Chicago Blackhawks. He beat Ed Belfour from the right circle a t Joe Louis Arena 2:25 into the second over­time for a 2-1 victory th a t sent the Red Wings to the Stanley Cup Finals.

Last season his goal 1:31 into the third overtime gave the Red Wings a 3-2 victory over the Anaheim Mighty Ducks in Game 2 of the second round May 4 a t Joe Louis.

“He’s ju s t a great goal scorer. He’s strong mentally,” said Steve Yzerman about Kozlov. “He’s small, but he’s physically strong. He’s strong on his skates. He’s good a t getting himself in a hole and getting his shot off.”

Sports Illustrated jinx?When Chris Osgood let in the 85-

footer from Jam ie Langenbrunner ju st 46 seconds into overtime Wednesday, giving the Stars a 3-2 victory, it should­n’t have surprised anyone.

Not because Osgood had given up a goal from the center red line by A1 M aclnnis in the second round, but because a story about Osgood appeared in the issue of Sports Illustrated th a t came out th a t day. And

while Osgood’s picture wasn’t on the cover (that honor went to some guy named Jordan, who plays basketball in Chicago), there was a cover teaser to the story on Osgood, which read: “Detroit Red Wings: They’re only as good as Osgood.”

The story talks about how Osgood handles the criticism from Red Wing fans for giving up soft goals.

“I didn’t pick it up until the last sec­ond when it skipped,” said Osgood. “...I’ve done it a hundred of times, deflect it into the corner. But it skipped and hit the inside of my stick and went in.”

His reaction: “The first thing I said was W hy me?’ I had done everything I had to do. I was 85 seconds away from having my best game in the playoffs. It makes me want to kick my butt.”

Bowman milestoneWednesday night’s game was the

300th Stanley Cup Playoff contest th a t Scotty Bowman has coached. His record is 189-111. Ju s t for comparison, the Stars (who were the M innesota North Stars from 1967-68 until 1992- 93, then moved to Dallas) have played 203 playoff games.

Shock intrigue area basketball fans

Lieberman-Cline

SHOCK, From P age 32first league championship.

“It’s a business,” Lieberman-Cline said. “Mr. S tern (NBA commissioner) isn’t doing it because he thinks we are cute.”

And Lieberm an-Cline has been ; iil involved in women’s

basketball enough to k know. Besides lead­

ing Old Dominion to two AIAW (Association for I n t e r c o l l e g i a t e A thletics for

Women, the pre­decessor to the

NCAA) N ational C h a m p i o n s h i p s , L i e b e r m a n - C l i n e

played on U.S. Olympic team s in 1975 in M ontreal, 1980 and 1992 in Barcelona. (The U.S. boycotted the 1980 games in Moscow.) She played in the professional Women’s Basketball League and the Women’s American Basketball Association. W hen the women’s leagues failed, Lieberman- Cline resumed her career with m en’s professional team s in the U nited States and C ontinental basketball leagues.

In her job as coach Lieberman-Cline is finding new challenges.

“I t’s definitely different being a coach and dealing with other aspects of the game,” Lieberman-Cline said. “I love teaching the game. But some­times when I’m getting on players, I

1998 Shock scheduleJune 13 CHARLOTTE June 15 CLEVELAND June 18 @ CharlotteJune 2 0 @ Cleveland (Fox Sports Detroit) June 21 <§> Washington (Fox Sports Detroit) June 23 SACRAMENTO (Fox Sports Detroit) June 25 WASHINGTON (Channel 20)June 27 <§> Cleveland June 2 9 CHARLOTTE July 1 NEW YORKJuly 6 @ New York (Fox Sports Detroit)July 8 PHOENIXJuly 9 @ HoustonJuly 11 <§> Washington (NBC)July 13 @ Utah July 15 @ Phoenix July 17 UTAH July 18 CLEVELANDJuly 22 WASHINGTON (Fox Sports Detroit) July 25 LOS ANGELES (NBC)July 26 @ New York July 31 SACRAMENTO Aug. 3 @ CharlotteAug. 5 LOS ANGELES (Fox Sports Detroit) Aug. 7 HOUSTON (Lifetime)Aug. 10 @ UtahAug. 11 <§> SacramentoAug. 14 @ PhoenixAug. 16 @ Los AngelesAug. 19 NEW YORK (Fox Sports Detroit)

University of Kansas. A veteran of European leagues, she played on the 1980 U.S. Olympic team the gold- medal-winning 1984 squad. She was the first woman to play on the Harlem Globetrotters (1985 to ‘87).

“She came into camp in great condi­tion,” Lieberman-Cline said. “And she works the hardest. Lynette is a con­summate professional.”

Woodard is the team co-captain with guard Rhonda Blades (Vanderbilt, 1995), whom Lieberman-Cline called “the best three-point shooter I have ever played with.”

“We want to keep pressure on the defense,” Lieberman-Cline said, “and create offense with a fast break and the half-court.”

For all their talent, WNBA players earn from $15,000 to $62,500 for a 30- game season — microscopic compared to their NBA counterparts.

“We know we’ve got to grow,” Lieberman-Cline said. “But right now we’re in a perfect place to do ju st tha t.”

s ta rt to wonder what I was like to coach as a player.”

The Shock includes several players from A ustralian and European leagues. The squad is anchored by guard Lynette Woodard, 38, from the

Shock valueWhat: The Detroit Shock Home games: 7:30 p.m. (except

July 25, 2 p.m.), a t the Palace.Tickets: $30, $20, $15, $12.50, $8

and $5.Available at: The Palace ticket

office and Ticketmaster.Call: 248-377-0100 Radio: WDFN-AM 1130

Strikes complicate World CupBy Reg M cG heeSpecial to the Journal

On Wednesday in the brand new Stade dc France in Paris, the world’s best soccer players will kick off compe­tition for the 1998 World Cup.

W hat should be a wonderful opportu­nity to showcase some of the world’s best athletes in “the beautiful game” may end up reflecting industrial tu r­moil.

The problem is th a t France is now in the m idst of tran sit worker strikes from Air France pilots to drivers of the metro tran sit and rail systems. With tens of thousands of soccer fans trying to get to matches and thousands of others just trying to get to France, the scene is already becoming somewhat chaotic.

Add to th a t the fact th a t far more fans are expected than available tickets ... and let’s ju s t say th a t soccer fans are not known for their patience and com­posure.

The up side for those of us on this side of the Atlantic is th a t television will put us right into the 10 stades (that is, sta­diums) w ithout the hassle of getting to the m atches or obtaining priceless tick­ets. Between ESPN, ESPN2, ABC and the Spanish-language channel Univision, all 64 matches, including the final, will be broadcast.

Coverage begins Tuesday with an inside look a t the United States team. “Outside the Lines,” the story of the 1998 U.S. national team , will be broad­cast a t 7:30 on ESPN. This is your best chance to get a look a t the team.

Opening-day coverage will be Wednesday a t 11 a.m. on ESPN with the Scotland vs. Brazil match. Brazil, a four-time World Cup winner and the defending champion, is heavily favored to repeat, although they were beaten 1-0 by the U.S. earlier this year. Last week the U.S. also beat Scotland 2-0 in a final preparatory m atch before head­ing to France.

The U.S’s opening m atch against three-tim e w inner Germ any will be June 15 and will be broadcast by ABC at 2:30 p.m. The U.S. faces Iran June 21 and Yugoslavia June 25.

All 22 members of the U.S. team are professional soccer players, either with Major League Soccer team s or with top- division team s in Europe. Clearly this is the best national team the U.S. has fielded in 58 years of World Cup compe­tition. Buy your video tapes now and keep your fingers crossed. If the 64 m atches are played without disruption, this World Cup should be an exciting display of the world’s most popular sport.

JUNE 7, 1998 THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL PAGE 31

/fUl A JFF COMPARE OUR |tigers are particular r J K - r VJU Ui in the public serviceL̂OCAL 732

We Support Your Right To Fight For Dignity and JusticeROSEVILLE COMMUNITY SCHOOLS EXECUTIVE BOARD AND MEMBERS

about their draft picks 32150 JOHN R, MADISON HEIGHTS 1 /4 Ml. SOUTH OF OAKLAND MALL

MON. THURS. FRI. 9:30 a.m. - 8:00 p.m.TUES. WEDS. 9:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. E Q Q .4 4 7 4

SAT. 9:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. • 1 # 1

Special to the Journal

If you were a left-handed pitcher, it was all right w ith the Detroit Tigers.

Detroit went heavily for southpaws, shortstops and catchers in Tuesday and Wednesday’s baseball draft, with the Tigers getting five of the first 87 players and 50 altogether.

Their top choice was another college pitcher, right-hander Jeff Weaver of Fresno State, a hard thrower whom the club envisions as contending for a roster spot next summ er if he signs soon enough to get going.

The sandwich pick Detroit made between the first two rounds, one of two choices the Tigers got because of Arizona’s signing of Willie Blair as a free agent, was tasty choice N athan Cornejo of Wellington, Kansas.

The 6-foot-4 Cornejo was rated one of the hardest-throwing prep pitchers in the country and has good bloodlines. His father, Mardie, pitched for the New York Mets in 1978, going 4-2 with a 2.43 ERA and three saves in 25 relief jobs.

Cornejo throws in the low 90s, has a good breaking ball and good command — but wears a knee brace as the result of two torn anterior cruciate liga­m ents, which have put him out of action much of the past two seasons.

Still, if he can be signed and brought along slowly, it’s a gamble th a t could pay off big-time. He’s a player Toronto would have gambled on a decade ago.

D etroit’s second-round pick was shortstop Brandon Inge of Virginia Commonwealth. Inge pitched some in college and thus has a shortstop’s arm, although scouts say he has a second basem an’s body. He fell in love with home runs this spring, which hu rt him after an outstanding Cape Cod League 1997 season. '*

The other bonus pick the Tigers picked up for the Diamondbacks’ sign­ing of Blair turned out to be Weaver’s left-handed Fresno State team m ate, Adam Pettyjohn.

Fresno State made an impression on the organization because Detroit draft­ed a third player from the school in the 26th round, th ird basem an Craig Daluz.

Pettyjohn had 145 strikeouts to Weaver’s 156. He throws a tad below 90 m ph bu t works in a slider and slurve.

W eaver fanned 181 to lead the nation in 1997, when the White Sox made him their choice in the second round. He didn’t s ta rt off as well this season but closed with a 19-strikeout game against Grand Canyon in the WAC tournam ent.

Birmingham Brother Rice’s Tammy Marx, a 6-foot-7 southpaw of some repute, went to the Tigers in the third round.

Marx has a top major league fastball

which suggests his destination could be as a closer.

Outfielder Derek Besco of Michigan (and W estland John Glenn) was Detroit’s choice in the 25th round. The Tigers also took a scion of the Paciorek family, third baseman Mack of UCLA.

Jim Essian’s son James, a catcher from Troy, was drafted in the 32nd round by K ansas City while Tom Paciorek’s son Thomas of Stone Mountain, Ga., was taken by the Mets in the 43rd round.

Detroit leaned heavily toward col­lege players with its early selections bu t wound up nearly evenly split because it went the other way in the later rounds. It didn’t take any first basemen or second basemen.

The Tigers took 13 right-handed . pitchers and eight lefties. Eight picks '*■ were shortstops, some of whom will wind up at second or elsewhere. It also drafted seven catchers, some of whom may find themselves a t first base.

Detroit drafted 10 outfielders and four third basemen.

D r a ft n o te sHere’s some mixed evidence on the

value of signing out of high school ver­sus going to college. RHP B rian Berrym an of Michigan went in the seventh round while J.J. Putz lasted until the 17th. Putz went in the third round out of high school, far higher than Berryman. ...

Rich Get Richer Dept.: The Yankees drafted M ichigan recruit Andy Brow n of Richmond, Ind., in the first round and have the money to sign the OF/RHP.

The Yankees also landed Brighton’s D rew H enson in the third round.

It’s hard to envision Henson being helped by playing 6-8 weeks of pro baseball for three summers while he fulfills his dream of playing quarter­back a t Michigan. By the time he gets his stroke down, it’s time for fall prac­tice. ...

Lefty Mark M ulder of MSU will definitely be on the fast track with Oakland. The A’s need pitching help possibly even more than another team we know. ...

Another southpaw, 6-6 J e ff Trzos of North Farmington, threw markedly slower this spring than last, which dropped him 24-25 rounds (to 26th), cost him millions and almost assured­ly means he’ll follow through on his commitment to play a t Michigan. ...

Greg Ryan put up great numbers playing first base for E astern Michigan, but Texas drafted him (in the 39th round) off his days as a left- handed pitcher for Dearborn Divine Child.

See page 29 for a complete list of Tigers draft picks and local players drafted by other teams.

U A W L O C A L 8 9 8

M em bership, leadership and retirees continue to support the locked-out

new spaper workers of Detroit.

'The Membership of Local 9231'' New Carlisle, Indiana

v*sP/Fully Support The Newspaper

^Workers in their Labor Dispute)

rJ Miller Cohen P.L.C. V,A t t o r n e y s a n d C o u n s e l o r s a t L a w Labor law yers you can trust

Representing Unions & Working People

Personal Injuries • Workers’ Compensation Employee Rights • Employment Discrimination

600 West Lafayette, Suite 202 Detroit, MI\ (313) 964-4454 f f

LOCAL#2031

"ADRIAN MICHIGANSUPPORTS LOCKED-OUT NEWSPAPER

WORKERS! SOLIDARITY FOREVER!

Warren Professional Fire Fighters UnionieYou have ^ s Long

our Support (juPnFi as it Takes”Ken Behnke President

Mark Schimanski Vice President

**1-c\°LOCAL 1383 • AFL-CIO

Gary D. Micu Secretary

Fred Helfmann Treasurer

UAW 412We continue to boycott the scab papers and are m arking our calender on July 12 at 2:00 p.m. for

"The One-Day Longer, Guaranteed No Speech, 3-Year Anniversary

Celebration Picnic"where returned and locked-out news­paper w orkers and supporters will come together for fun, food and non­scab festivities.Keep looking in the Detroit Sunday Journal for further details. Location to be announced soon.We are an amalgamated local union, always accepting new members in technical, office, professional and skilled trade occupations.

lLMb

PAGES 30: Getting f® s®eeer% World Cep is a problem* says Hag HeGfiee*

PaulHarris

PAGE 31 : U gars went after feft-liaaclad pitelilag la drafts says Mickard L« Sfs®®§€«

JUNE 7, 1998

Shock intrigue area fansby P at C ybulsk i H artleyJournal S ta ff Writer

Ready or not, Detroit is about to get Shocked by women’s professional bas­ketball.

The Detroit Shock of the Women’s National Basketball Association open the ir inaugura l season Ju n e 13 against the Charlotte Sting.

“We’re going to play hard every n igh t,” prom ises the Shock coach, Hall-of-Fam er Nancy Lieberman- Cline. “I hope the Detroit fans will feel like it’s their team .”

There is evidence the fans have already adopted the Shock. The Palace says the opening game is nearly a sell­out, and 8,000 season tickets have been sold.

“I th ink we’ve finally proven that professional basketball is not ju st a m en’s event,” Lieberman-Cline said.

If women’s professional basketball is finally here to stay, it’s hard to say when the corner was turned after sev­eral failed leagues. Maybe it was ESPN’s commitment to the women’s college Final Four in recent years.

A sure sign was when Rebecca Lobo and the New York Libertys of the WNBA were featured in an episode of the popular sitcom “Mad About You” this past season. By any m easuring stick it has been a long time coming.

“We ju s t needed tim e,” said Lieberm an-Cline. “Time, exposure, media and attendance — 1996 was ju st the perfect time.”

In the spring of 1996 the NBA Board of Governors decided to form the WNBA. Play began the following sea­son with eight teams. The Shock and the Washington Mystics are this year’s two-team expansion.

It may be the NBA sponsorship, or it may indeed be th a t women’s basket­ball has arrived, but the WNBA dou­bled its predicted attendance of 4,000 a game. The league drew an average of 9,804 fans a game in its inaugural sea­son in 1997, and 18,937 were on hand to watch the Houston Comets win the

See SHOCK, Page 30

PAGE 32______________________________. . r ::"• £ ; V ,r \

Sports

Jamie Macoun breaks up a shot by Stars right wing Pat Verbeek while Chris Osgood keeps the puck out of the net in game 4.

Bring on those Caps!2-0 win makes Wings the best in the West

There seemed to be no way the Red Wings could make it back this far, particularly with the Colorado Avalanche sm arting from being defeated by the Red Wings in the 1997 Western Conference Finals. The Dallas Stars were seemingly ready to take the next step after being elimi­nated in the first round last season.

But when the Joe Louis Arena clock read 0:00 Friday night, Detroit had defeated the Stars 2-0 to eliminate them from the Western Conference Finals and the Red Wings had gotten back to the Finals and are heavily favored to beat the Capitals and become the first team since the P ittsburgh Penguins in 1991 and 1992 to win tw o-straight Stanley Cups.

See WINGS, Page 29

With the events of the past couple of m onths, it’s no surprise th a t the Detroit Red Wings have advanced to their second consecutive Stanley Cup Finals series and their third in four years.

But when you look back to October when Detroit started the season in Calgary th e ir m eeting w ith the Washington Capitals - which begins Tuesday a t 8 p.m. a t Joe Louis Arena - seemed very unlikely.

Sure the Red Wings were coming off a season in which they’d won the Stanley Cup, bu t much had happened between the time members of the Red Wings skated around the JLA ice with the cherished chalice on June 7, 1997.* Those events robbed the Wings of three of the biggest reasons they had won the Cup and exacted a heavy

emotional toll on the team.The lim ousine accident which

ended the career of Vladimir Konstantinov, the trade of Mike Vernon to the San Jose Sharks and the stalled contract negotiations with Sergei Fedorov had conspired to strip Detroit of its best defenseman, the goaltender which had won the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP and the m ost talen ted player on the squad.

PAGE 4 THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL JUNE 7, 1998

labor notebook

Locked-out workers rattle Tony Ridder

DAVID ELSILA/Special to the Journal

Free Press Publisher Heath Meriwether (facing camera) isn’t in a listening mood.

By Alan F orsythJournal S ta ff Writer

If Tony Ridder felt he could ven­ture into Michigan to conduct business as usual, he quickly learned otherwise.

Ridder, the chairm an and CEO of Knight Ridder, left the M arshall Symposium session a t the University of Michigan, which he was to moder­ate after being confronted May 30 by locked-out workers and supporters.

Publisher Phil Power, who is attem pting to force concessions from union w orkers a t his prosperous Observer & Eccentric Newspapers, also dropped off the panel.

It was a notable few days in other respects as well.

L ater th a t afternoon, locked-out workers and supporters dem onstrat­ed a t the homes of Free Press Publisher H eath M eriw ether and Editor Joe Stroud.

The Ann Arbor News ran a front­page story the next day about events a t U-M’s Power Center. It is rare tha t the lockout gets th a t kind of promi­nence outside of the Sunday Journal or a labor paper. For example, the newspaper summ it on May 18, which a ttrac ted nearly 300 participants, including 60 elected officials, was almost completely blacked out by print and broadcast media.

Maxwell Taylor Kennedy, editor of a new book on his father, the late Sen. Robert Kennedy, withdrew from a Free Press author luncheon when he learned the newspaper is embroiled in an ongoing labor dispute.

Questioning RidderWhen Ridder began the panel dis­

cussion on “The Media and Popular Culture” on May 30, Mike Zielinski, representative of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, stood and interjected, “Mr. Ridder, why do you and your corporation continue to break the law?”

Zielinski pointed out th a t a N ational Labor Relations Board administrative law judge has found tha t the Free Press, which is owned by Knight Ridder, the Detroit News, owned by G annett Co., and Detroit Newspapers, owned jointly by K-R and G annett Co. Inc., “caused” and “prolonged” the newspaper strike by means of 10 unfair labor practices.

Ridder responded th a t he has answered such questions the last three years a t Knight Ridder’s annual meetings.

Zielinski continued his drum beat until he was ordered from the build­ing. That had little effect. The ques­tions and comments, and a thunder­ous “No scab papers” chant, kept com­ing from the auditorium.

The discussion was postponed and another session started. The popular

culture panel came back three hours later, but with­out Ridder and Power.

Lou Mleczko, president of the Newspaper Guild Local 22, told the Ann Arbor News, “The people who organized this event should know th a t Ridder is involved in one of the largest labor disputes in the country.”

In December Ridder told the PaineW ebber Media Conference, “The unions are still out there raising hell.”

This week he m ight repeat th a t statement.

Like father, like sonThe au thor lunch in

W arren a t which Max Kennedy was to appear was sponsored by the Free Press and the L ibrary Cooperative of Macomb, a network tha t includes the 17 state-certified public library sys­tems in Macomb County, plus Harper Woods and Troy.

Donald Worrell, director of the Mt. Clemens Public Library, who books au thors for the twice-a-year lun­cheons, said of the cancellation: “It’s unfortunate. I spoke directly with Max Kennedy. I have a lot of respect for him. He is a nice fellow. He felt, given the labor dispute, he would not be able to cross the picket line were there pickets there. I respect his deci­sion. It was from his conscience.”

The Free Press reported the cancel­lation of the luncheon in an inconspic­uous article on Page 3B of the June 1 paper, unread by the close to 200 peo­ple who showed up a t the Royalty House in Warren. A copy of the article was taped to the door. No Free Press representatives were present but union members were, and they gave ticket-holders the phone number to call for their $20 refund.

The union members provided some details: no contracts; no serious bar­gaining; more than 1,000 workers still off their jobs after 35 months; many others fired, mostly for trivial or nonexistent offenses; union members called back to part-time work at half

pay; circulation down 30 percent.When asked why the Library

Cooperative sponsors the book lun­cheon with the Free Press, Worrell said the question had never been dis­cussed by the members.

Kennedy’s book, “Make Gentle the Life of this World: The Vision of Robert F. Kennedy,” is published by Harcourt Brace.

In the hoodFreep Publisher Meriwether threw

up his arms when he saw locked-out workers and supporters advancing toward his house in Ann Arbor chant­ing, “No scab papers.”

He retreated indoors, then went back outside, had a brief exchange with Zielinski, then left in anger.

The following Monday morning, sources say, Meriwether went to see Detroit Newspapers CEO Frank Vega to complain about inadequate security.

From 1995 through 1997, Meriwether, Vega and the News’ pub­lisher routinely were accompanied by bodyguards in public.

Meriwether did not respond to calls from a Journal reporter.

Ridder had four bodyguards a t the U-M event.Ridder’s warm-up

trip, Knight Ridder told employees at its Miami headquarters th a t 31 jobs would be eliminated as a part of Ridder’s plan to move the corporate nerve center to San Jose, Calif., so the company can immerse itself in the culture of the Internet.

“For many dedicated Knight Ridder employees, much of today’s news was painful to hear. None of us enjoys telling loyal, hard-w orking people th a t their positions have been elimi­nated,” Ridder said. “Right now, the upheaval among our employees is sad in m any ways. But it is necessary.”

ACOSS celebrationTwo hundred people attended the

ACOSS awards dinner a t UAW Local 22 on May 30, held to thank Canadian unionists for their support.

The Action Coalition of Strikers and Supporters presented the Metropoli­tan Council of Newspaper Unions a check for $4,600 raised by the ACOSS Spring Offensive Tour in Alberta, British Columbia and Ontario, and the U.S. Northwest. Jack Howe, pres­ident of GCIU Local 13N, and Loraine McClure, president of GCIU Local 289, accepted for the council.

Activist Bruce Allen from St. Catharines, Ontario, was honored for organizing the tour. In a short speech, Allen talked about the possibilities the In ternet has created for coopera­tion between the labor movements of m any countries. Through the Internet, he said, ACOSS is develop­ing an international reputation.

Carol O’Neal said ACOSS will take the story of the Detroit newspaper lockout — and the boycott of USA Today, published by G annett — to New Zealand, A ustralia and Europe.

Call the ACOSS hot line a t 810-447- 2716 for updates and events.

Alan Forsyth is a locked-out Detroit News copy editor.

The day before Ridder’s Michigan

Teamsters election setA federal judge has approved the

schedule for the In ternational Brotherhood of Teamsters vote on a new president.

Candidates m ust file nominating papers by June 15. Ballots will be mailed to the union’s 1.4 million members on Sept. 14. The vote count will begin on Oct. 14.

Ron Carey won the presidential election in 1996, but the results

were thrown out because of fund-, raising irregularities in his cam­paign. Carey subsequently was barred from running.

The announced candidates are James P. Hoffa, who lost to Carey in 1996 but was cleared to run again by a court-appointed monitor, and Tom Leedham, director of the 4 0 0 , 0 0 0 - m e m b e r W a r e h o u s e Division.

JUNE 7, 1998 THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL PAGE 5

Social worker’s death exposes dangers in systemBy S teven H aagSpecial to the Journal

The death of C hildren’s Protective Services worker Lisa Putm an highlights the deficiencies in the system and should serve as a wake-up call to the

governor, Legislature and Fam ily Independence Agency administration. Miss Putm an was beaten while visit­ing a home on May 20, to ascertain w hether conditions had improved enough to allow two children to return there. Two clients have been charged with first-degree murder.

Miss Putm an’s death dem onstrates the need for wholesale changes, including adequate staffing levels, safety training, personal protection devices and communication tools for employees.

The need for safety is not limited to Children’s Protective Services work­ers. Any state employees going into clients’ homes m ust have the skills and tools to protect themselves.

W ith welfare reform came the requirem ent for FIA workers to visit clients a t home. FIA workers are the employees who handle food stamps, Medicaid and m onetary assistance cases. These positions were previous­ly office-based, and clients went into the offices to meet with workers.

Foster care workers, who work with families from whom children have been removed by court order, m ust also m eet with parents and children in the home on a monthly basis. With the current conditions, these workers put themselves into the same poten­tially dangerous situation in which Miss Putm an found herself.

To her credit, M arva Livingston Hammons, FIA director, did inform staff th a t she is committed to protect­ing every employee in the community, w hether in C hildren’s Protective Services, FIA or foster care. Based on Michigan’s track record with respond­ing to employee concerns, though, it is questionable whether the protection will be sufficient.

Safety has been a concern for state employees since a t least 1995, when an employee was m urdered by a resi­dent a t Maxey Training School.

In response to th a t incident, the state began offering personal protec­tion training to staff a t Maxey. The UAW, which represents state employ­ees, asked th a t the same training be offered to o ther staff, including Children’s Protective Services and foster care. The s ta te said more research into the cost was necessary.

L ast October Ingham County employees were assaulted by clients. Again, the state took no m easures to provide personal protection training.

Most disturbing, on the same day as Miss P u tm an ’s funeral, another Children’s Protective Services worker was assau lted by a parent.

Fortunately, th a t worker escaped without serious injury. Police later found a loaded assault weapon in the home.

Although the level of violence has risen drastically, assau lts against state employees are not new phenom­ena. As recently as 1996, officials in Lansing had no mechanism in place to even collect incident reports from each county, much less ensure tha t problems were dealt with appropri­ately. This makes it possible for offi­cials in Lansing to present to legisla­tors a completely different picture from what employees across the state see, a practice tha t continues.

For the last several years, employ­ees across the state have been report­ing th a t caseload sizes are unm anage­able. The unmanageability was made worse with passage of the so-called Binsfeld legislation in 1997, a pack­age of 10 bills derived from the July 1996 report of a commission chaired by Lt. Gov. Connie Binsfeld, which examined the child protection system.

Among other things, the legislation, which became effective on April 1, m andates th a t foster care workers meet with each parent monthly in the parent’s home. The previous standard had been monthly face-to-face contact w ith each parent, which could occur in the FIA office. W ith curren t caseloads hovering around 30-40 chil­dren for foster care workers, the new standards double or triple the number of home visits necessary.

The only way employees are m eet­ing the m andate is to cut down the length of each visit, especially with the children. Workers feel coerced into a “d rive-th ru” m entality. However, the FIA director and the governor have said th a t caseload sizes are not too large, and indicate th a t problems m ust be the fault of the workers — th a t they are lazy, disorganized or inefficient.

W hat is conveniently overlooked by the governor is the priority recom­m endation from the Binsfeld Commission th a t caseloads be no more than 20 cases per worker for fos­ter care. FIA adm inistrators have taken it upon themselves to redefine the term “case.” Historically, one child has constituted one case for foster care. This reflected the fact th a t each child has unique needs, tha t siblings may not always be placed together and th a t each child comes with his or her own pile of paperwork, some of which has to be completed monthly.

The current fashion among Lansing officials is to count each family as one foster care case, regardless of the num ber of children in the family. This is a gross oversimplification of the work involved, but it is apparently enough to satisfy legislators.

Caseload size especially is impor­tan t if the buddy system for home vis­its is to be feasible. Under current

opinioncaseloads, pairing is not an option, because workers are scrambling to complete their own home visits.

State employees also have been requesting cellular phones and/or pagers for many years. The governor and the FIA adm inistration have repeatedly deferred this decision to the county directors. By doing so, the state has abrogated its responsibility to see to it th a t each employee has the necessary tools for the job.

The job of protecting children becomes more dangerous with each passing year.

Lisa Putm an’s death was almost certainly preventable. It would have been expensive, but hum an lives have no price tag. The UAW is once again asking th a t state officials listen to the concerns of employees and make the job safer. Hopefully, Lisa Putm an’s death will not be forgotten.

Steven Haag ofHamtramck, a foster care worker in the Mt. Clemens office of the Family Independence Agency, is a member o f UAW Local 6000.

Hie Detroit Sunday Journal daily 3| C H ) Q A N ' ^/5 Midday ; 4-9-7 Eve:

6/4 Midday: 6-8-1 Eve:; 6/3 Midday: 9-5-6 Eve:6/2 Midday: 1-4-0 Eve:

S t l l l l P R Y ^ Midday: 4-7-6 Eve:5/30 Midday: 2-7-4 Eve:

CASH 56/4 5 12 14 16 326/3 18 23 24 27 30 6/46/2 3 4 10 16 216/1 10 16 17 23 245/29 1 10 21 34 39 D/̂

LOTTO6/3 6 15 20 29 34 41 6/15/30 4 10 21 28 34 43

THE BIG GAME 5/296/2 9 19 28 30 31 195/29 3 35 36 43 47 10

N.A.7-6-69-2-57-1-38-5-9 4-2-5

4 5 54 58

3 12 38 39

3 5 45 47

2 5 41 45

DAILY 46/5 Midday: 4-3-4-5 Eve: N.A.6/4 Midday: 4-3-9-0 6/3 Midday: 1-8-4-9 6/2 Midday: 9-7-4-4 6/1 Midday: 0-5-5-65/30 Midday: 3-9-3-2

Eve: 8-2-8-2 Eve: 3-7-6-9 Eve: 9-8-1-3 Eve: 6-5-4-7 Eve: 5-4-4-9

MICHIGAN KENO7 10 19 26 39 48 49

61 63 65 66 68 69 7016 17 20 22 28 31 3242 47 55 58 59 76 7713 16 21 23 28 33 3448 56 60 61

9 12 18 2164 65 73 22 25 28

48 50 54 59 70 72 77(Numbers are not off icial.)ial.)

52 53 76 79 33 3578 79 38 4079 80 36 40 79 80

UAW L ocal 6000providing services to the people o f Michigan

• C orrectio n s — The Parole/Probation Officers th a t supervise con­victed felons to pro tect the public are UAW Local 6000 M embers.

• F am ily In d ep en d en ce A gen cy (form erly D SS) — Local 6000 m em bers pro tect children and th e elderly from abuse and neglect and work w ith fam ilies to help them learn skills to become self-sufficient.

• C om m u nity H ea lth — O ur m em bers provide tre a tm e n t for peo­ple w ith em otional or m ental illness. They also m onitor nu rsing hom es for compliance to pro tect our elderly and adm in ister program s th a t provide im m unizations and o ther protections to our children.

• S e c r e t a r y o f S t a t e — Local 6000 m em bers help you w ith title transactions, renew al of license p lates and d river licenses.

• S ta te P o lice — The D ispatchers th a t answ er your calls of d is­tre ss from the highw ay and get you the help you need are Local 6000 m em bers.

(and many others in every state department and agency)

These are the same people who are blasted and maligned by their boss, John Engler — a m an who has shown disdain and loathing for

working people across the sta te of Michigan, especially those inorganized labor.

I t ’s tim e fo r a ch an ge!

UfllU

UAW Local supports the locked-out newspaper workers in their quest for justice.

PAGE 6 THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL JUNE 7, 1998

S unday J o u r n a lThe Detroit Sunday Journal is published weekly by Detroit Sunday Journal Inc., 450 W. Fort St., Detroit, Ml 48226. Mail Subscription price is $15 for three months, $30 for six months (no refunds). Call (313) 964-5655, ext. 111 to subscribe, or, for more information.

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Appeals court ruling supports truck driversBEER, From Page 1

rescind changes in term s of employ­m ent th a t they imposed in 1991.

McKnight said the changes includ­ed a reduction of $8.33 an hour in the drivers’ base pay. He added: “Some people are entitled to several hundreds of thousands of dollars in back pay.”

According to NLRB Regional Director William Schaub, the court ruled th a t the companies broke the law by entering into a pact th a t they would not undercut each other in negotiations and would not tell the unions about it.

Schaub said lawyers on his staff will ask the companies if they w ant to settle the case, and will begin fig­uring out how m uch money will be required to compensate fully each of the drivers affected by the imposed conditions. The regional director’s m onetary recommendations are sub­ject to fu rther litigation. B ut while the dispute continues, the back-pay liability continues to grow.

The five distributors are Eastown D istribu tors, based in H ighland Park; H ubert D istributors, based in Pontiac; O ak D istribu ting of Waterford; Powers D istributing of Pontiac; and Don Lee Distributor, which has been sold to a new owner not involved in the case.

Local 1038 President Greg Nowak said his members are “pretty happy,” but said many of the drivers affected are no longer with the same employer.

“There have been an awful lot of term inations, and a lot of people have left,” said Nowak.

Ron Baetens, president of Oak D istributing, said, “I th ink their premise is th a t we bargained as a group, and nothing could be further from the tru th . ... I t’s very fru s tra t­ing for us, very frustra ting .”

He said one possibility is an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. The Supreme Court hears only a small fraction of the cases it is asked to review.

In 1993 an NLRB adm inistrative law judge held a tria l lasting 63 days. McKnight said the big break came during argum ents over docu­m ents each side had provided to the other as evidence. McKnight said the companies, probably by m istake, suddenly produced w hat he called a bargaining agreement.

“Over a couple of years, the com­panies consistently w ithheld th is docum ent, denied its existence, refused to produce it when subpoe­naed or said it was privileged,” M cKnight said. “But a t the outset of the trial, it was produced during the h eat of argum ent in response to a union subpoena.

“The NLRB regional director then adjourned the tria l and requested authority from the NLRB general counsel to reopen an investigation of w hether the employers had engaged in joint bargaining while denying to the unions the existence of any joint bargaining agreem ent.”

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THE CHAIN GANG Get th e book G annett does not w ant you to read!You can pick up your copy atthe Council of UnionsHeadquarters, 450 W. Fort, 2ndfloor, Detroit.

$ O y |9 5 „ $ 0 5 0 _ S O - 7 4 5Plus postage JL — £ . I Total for one book by mail. Locked out workers with I.D. g e l $ 1 0 off.

To order, send check or money order made payable to: Metropolitan Council of Newspaper Unions. All proceeds to help newspaper workers in their labor dispute.Name __________________________________________ Phone :: _____________Address__________________________________________________________ _City _______________________ State. _Zip CodeMail to: Metropolitan Council of N ew spaper Unions, ‘T h e Chain G ang,” 450 W. Fort, 2nd floor, Detroit, Ml Union Local_____________________________________________ Print clearly. Please allow 2 weeks for delivery

JUNE 7, 1998 THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL PAGE 7

between the lines

AL BENCHICH/Special to the Journal

Last week's photo by Journal reader David Elsila of a lawn sign at the Great Wall of China has inspired others. Laurie Townsend of Detroit holds hers high at the famous red rocks at Sedona, Ariz., near the Grand Canyon. “ Lots of transplanted Michiganians here," she writes, “and none of them subscribes to the News or Free Press."

An Emmy for Schaefer, a slam for Albom

Is there life after the Freep? You bet. One of the paper’s ace reporters, Jim Schaefer, who went out on strike and never went back, is now an investigative

producer for WXYZ-TV Channel 7. He ju st earned a local Emmy for scripting a story about an in ter­m inably slow Recorder’s Court judge. Congrats!Creative license?

Did Freep sports scribbler and WJR-AM (760) yakker M itch Albom steal the idea for his best seller, “Tuesdays With Morrie”? You decide. In 1993 N ational Public Radio host Bob Edw ards wrote “M ornings W ith Red,” about his relationship with an older mentor,

sportscaster R ed Barber. Albom used the same gimmick in his book, Edwards told a May 25 radio mag. “He took my idea, he all but took my title and he’s No. 1. And am I a pub­lic radio schlemiel or what?” groused Edwards. P.S. Albom’s book even has the same cover design.

Quite a collectionThe D etroit News planned to

introduce reporters and editors to the community a t Somerset mall on Wednesday evening. Unfortunately only about 12 members of the com­m unity wanted to meet them. The greater contingents were 40 or so locked-out workers and sympathiz­ers and around 15 Troy police, Vance guards and mall security. Teamsters

international representative M ike Z ielinsk i asked News Publisher Mark Silverm an why the News didn’t cover the newspaper summit meeting. Silverman said he didn’t know if they covered it, th a t he does not read the News every day. “Hundreds of thousands of others don’t either,” replied Zielinski.

Stand-up comicsThere’s som ething new in the

Sunday Macomb Daily, Royal Oak Tribune and Oakland Press and it’s something the Detroit newspapers don’t have: classic comic strips. The suburban papers’ new second sec­tion of comics brings back Pogo, Betty Boop, Flash Gordon, Popeye, Li’l Abner, Krazy Kat and four other

classics. And starting June 15, the afternoon Macomb Daily is going morning.

Quote of the day“Each time a m an stands up for an

ideal or acts to improve the lot of others or strikes out against injus­tice, he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope (and) those ripples build a cur­ren t which can sweep down the m ightiest walls of oppression.”

— R ob ert F. K en n ed y Jr., whose son M axw ell canceled an appearance a t a Freep author lunch June 1 because of the Detroit news­papers’ labor dispute

Fax BTL at 964-5554 or e-mail us detjourn@aol. com.

Flap over painting puts EMU center on the spot“My individual freedom of expression as a faculty member was threate

— EMU art professor Igor Beginin

PAINTING, From P age 3

has selected his students’ paintings for display and possible sale a t the Eagle C rest center since 1990. Beginin said Everson did the painting in response to his assignm ent to pro­duce a work th a t carried a strong moral, social or family message.

“I selected on the basis of the quali­ty, not the content,” Beginin said.

Beginin said he was surprised when he was informed the painting had been removed. It was supposed to rem ain on display until September or until it was sold.

“These people have to learn some­thing,” Beginin said. “They have to be educated th a t there is such a thing as freedom of expression. My individual freedom of expression as a faculty m em ber was th rea tened by th is action.”

The EMU chapter of the American Association of University Professors

plans to discuss the painting’s removal. Some teachers and staffers a t EMU say they w ant an apology from the university.

Eagle Crest is m anaged by the EMU Foundation, a quasi-indepen­dent arm of the university. The Foundation’s board includes the uni­versity president and other EMU rep­resentatives and business and indus­try officials, but no labor representa­tives, Harrison-Harris said.

As part of the clerical staff a t EMU for 16 years, Everson is a member of UAW Local 1975. Workers a t Eagle C rest are also UAW members. Harrison-Harris says she sometimes gives the UAW free space at the cen­ter to conduct union meetings.

Everson said the painting grew out of personal experiences, including a visit to Mexican factories and a few stin ts on picket lines outside the Detroit newspapers’ buildings.

“Union members should stick up for other union members,” she said.

Everson said her hope was tha t someone who saw the painting at Eagle Crest would buy it.

“I don’t think my painting had an equal opportunity chance,” she said. “How could they tell in three days? They should have given it some more time for their union clients to see it.”

Stanley S tew art of Ypsilanti Township bought Everson’s painting for $300, after seeing a story about it in the Ann Arbor News. Stewart says

he bought the painting as a surprise birthday present for his brother, Bill.

Bill S tew art recently retired after 30 years as a staff attorney for the National Labor Relations Board in Washington, D.C. Stew art was chief assistan t to board Chairm an William B. Gould IV. Last July Gould and the board’s two other members voted to order the NLRB’s general counsel to seek a Section 10(j) injunction tha t would have returned most locked-out Detroit newspaper workers back to their jobs. The injunction was denied.

Fred Chase of JW J and the International Workers of the World said the painting’s removal and the aborted appearance of Knight Ridder CEO Anthony Ridder a t a University of Michigan symposium panel May 30 have fired up local activists.

“The universities around here are really getting in the face of workers,” Chase said. ‘We have to do something about it.”

JUNE 7, 1998 PAGE 8

O pinionCo-editors: Susan Watson, Jim McFarlin

Managing Editor: Emily Everett

Circulation director: Joe Merritt

Published by Detroit Sunday Journal Inc.450 W. Fort Detroit, Mich. 48226

313-964-5655 Fax: 313-964-5554 E-mail: [email protected]

Web site: http://www.rust.net/~workers/strike.html

Metro NY Labor Communications Council Communicator of the Year The Working Group Joady Award winner

Media & Democracy Congress Media Hero of the Year

School kids already have the right to pray

There is nothing wrong with prayer. There is nothing wrong with saying a prayer in school. However, there is quite a bit wrong with a right-wing congressional

effort designed to am end the U.S. Constitution to perm it prayer in public schools.

That probably appears more than a little contradictory to some readers of th is editorial. A ppearances can be deceiving, however, which is why President Clinton is right to oppose the Religious Freedom Amendment being sponsored in the House by Rep. Ernest Istook, R-Okla.

Contrary to w hat supporters of the bill are saying, the president is not expressing a desire to prohibit school- age Christians from expressing their faith inside public school walls. Rather he is trying to prevent some people on the religious right from getting out of control in their zeal to convert the nation’s public schools into a one-reli­gion-only zone, where little or no toler­ance for other viewpoints will be per­mitted.

As Clinton said: “Some people say there should be a constitutional amendm ent to allow voluntary prayer in our public schools, bu t there already is one — it’s the F irst Amendment.” The F irst Amendment guarantees both free speech and the separation of church and state.

The so-called Religious Freedom Amendment would amend the U.S. Constitution to make it easier for stu ­dents to partic ipa te voluntarily in school prayer. In order for it to pass, the amendm ent m ust be approved by two- thirds of House members present and voting. For the C onstitution to be changed, the Senate also would have to approve the am endm ent by a two- thirds vote and 34 states would have to ratify it. T hat’s quite a bit of work for a piece of legislation th a t’s not even nec­essary.

Supporters of the proposed amend­ment, such as the Christian Coalition, suggest th a t it is necessary to reverse years of unfavorable court rulings th a t supposedly have made it difficult for schoolchildren to participate in volun­tary, student-led prayer in the class­room.

That is a hard argum ent to swallow since all students have the right to pray privately and individually while in school. Not even in the Bible does it say all prayer can take place only in the m idst of large groups of people. If that were the case Moses probably wouldn’t have accomplished anywhere near as much as he did. The m an prayed pri­vately all the time, as did other biblical figures — including Jesus Christ.

Furtherm ore, America’s schoolchil­dren already have the right to say grace a t lunchtime, the right to organize reli­gious groups and m eet on school grounds, the right to read the Bible or religious texts during free time and the right to be free of efforts to coerce their participation in religious activity.

The D epartm ent of Education is releasing revised presidential guide­lines on school prayer originally issued three years ago. The president has said the changes are necessary because of a 1997 Supreme Court ruling tha t held th a t the 1993 Religious Freedom Restoration Act was unconstitutional. The revised guidelines give schools the discretion to excuse children from lessons th a t are inconsistent with their religious beliefs. Schools also decide whether students may wear religious garb such as yarmulkes or head scarves to class.

Granted, the revisions probably will not be enough to appease the religious hard core because they grant schools the right to have some say-so over what goes on inside the classroom instead of turning the whole m atter over to the religious conservatives and allowing them to set the agenda.

Perhaps this is a good time for reli­gious conservatives to learn th a t not everyone can get everything he or she wants.

10-second editorialSince 1978, GM has elim i­

nated 44,000 good jobs in Flint, yet city officials just gave GM $107 million in tax breaks to build a new engine plant there. What a deal.

&‘We've been cited by OSHA, EPA and the Labor Department,

and we're STILL not turning a profit?"

commentary

Your job may be killing you

By Jim H ightow er

A re you dying to get to work today? Be careful once you’re there, because work is a dangerous place to be — so dangerous th a t more

than 6,000 of us die each year from explosions, cave-ins, electrocution and other nasties on the job. On top of that, 60,000 more of us die each year from cancer and other dis­eases we get from the work we do. Six million more are injured each year, making the American work­place by far the most dangerous in the industrialized world.

Why is that? Because corporate executives do a cold, bottom-line calculation in which they figure it’s much cheaper to pay a few fines and some occasional death benefits for killing or maiming thousands of people each year than it is to install the systems, technologies and pro­cedures th a t would prevent these deaths and injuries.

These same executives also use their financial and lobbying clout in Congress to kill the kind of safety legislation th a t would bring the American workplace up to a civi­lized standard.

An example is the effort by the

N ational Association of Conven­ience Stores to stop OSHA from issuing guidelines th a t would pro­tect night clerks. About 500 retail clerks a year are killed in robberies, making it one of the most danger­ous jobs in America. Yet this corpo­rate lobbying group is fighting such basic protections as using drop safes, bulletproof glass, good light­ing and security cam eras, and putting two clerks on dangerous shifts. Night clerks are mostly low- income people w ith no political power, though. They’re viewed as expendable, not even worth the cost of some bulletproof glass.

A system th a t allows corpora­tions to profit by shoving the grue­some price of an unsafe workplace onto workers and their families is not ju s t a dangerous system, it’s immoral. Let’s be honest about w hat’s going on here. Many of these on-the-job deaths are not “acciden­tal.” They’re murder.

Jim Hightower hosts Live at the Chat & Chew,” a populist radio program broadcast by United Broadcasting Network, and is the author o f “There’s Nothing in the Middle o f the Road but Yellow Stripes and Dead Armadillos.”

JUNE 7, 1998 PAGE 9

Postal workers say criticism unwarrantedI guess it was ju s t too easy to fall

back on the old standard joke of picking on the post office. Referring to the Postal Service’s a ttem pt to raise the price of a first-class stam p to 33 cents, the Opinion Page in the May 17 issue of the Journal repeat­edly called the post office inefficient, ineffective and unwilling to m eet the needs of its customers.

N othing could be fu rther from the truth!

I am the president of the L etter C arriers Union in Buffalo and west­e rn New York, B ranch 3 of the N ational Association of L e tte r Carriers. Along with Branch 1 in Detroit, Buffalo is a charter member of the NALC, formed in 1889.

And we are proud of the fact th a t it is through the efforts of union labor th a t the Postal Service has become the very best postal delivery system in the world. Nobody else even comes close to us, in both price and tim eli­ness of delivery. For 32 cents, every citizen in America has access to sending correspondence anywhere else in the nation and it gets there in ju s t a couple of days. In fact, on-time delivery scores are setting records throughout the country.

Does th a t m ean the union agrees th a t the post office, after m aking bil­lions of dollars, needs to raise postage? Absolutely not. More than anything else, it’s ju s t a bargaining ploy because our contract with the service runs out th is November.

B ut stick to the tru th . You can dis­agree w ith the ra te hike request, ju s t don’t disparage the finest postal workers in the world and mislead the public in regard to the type of Postal Service th a t we have and fre­quently take for granted.

The ed ito ria l also s ta ted how postage has gone up through the years. T hat is a bogus argum ent. How m uch have new spapers and everything else gone up over the years? Should not postal workers receive a decent wage? Or does the new spaper of the striking workers in

Detroit feel th a t postal wages should have been kept artificially low to avoid rate hikes over the years?

R o b e r t J . M lcLennanBuffalo , N.Y.

Postal workers furious 'I am ju st livid. I have been an avid

supporter of strik ing new spaper w orkers. However, I am greatly insulted by your recent article about the new postage rate increase.

Yes, rates are going to go up 1 cent to a total of 33 cents. So what!! How much are we paying today for phone calls? I don’t hear anyone crying about that. I t’s still cheaper to write a letter than call a loved one.

How about the rapidly increasing costs of food, u tilities, new cars, clothes, insurance, health care, pre­scriptions, taxes, school tuition, etc.? One cent more per stam p doesn’t even compare to the increases of everything else I’ve mentioned. The average consumer will probably pay no more than an extra 25 to 50 cents per month.

The United States Postal Service is the best in the whole world! We are cheaper, more efficient than any­where else. Ju s t ask anyone from another country.

I w ant someone a t your paper to explain ju s t how the service is “inef­ficient.” I saw no examples anywhere in the article. W hat specifically needs improving?

There were a lot of assum ptions made about “surpluses” of money a t the Postal Service. Not true. The USPS is constantly updating its sorting m achines, repairing and replacing trucks and other equip­m ent necessary for mail delivery, postal employee salaries and bene­fits, expanded operations in develop­ing communities and transportation costs. These things cost a lot of money! The service is not funded by any tax dollars either.

During the entire strike I have supported your cause. I have refused to buy newspapers, I had a bumper

letterssticker on my car th a t said “No scab papers,” I bought a “No ra t papers” T-shirt. I have been a regular sub­scriber to the Sunday Jou rna l almost from day one, I bought dia­pers for striking families and gave cash for striking families, etc.

I don’t appreciate striking newspa­per union members bashing postal union members for m aking money. Sounds like sour grapes coming from strik ing new spaper workers. You folks a t the Sunday Journal keep sticking out your hands to us union members for help and m any of us have handed over some or a lot of th a t “green safety cushion” to help your cause. We postal employees process and deliver your papers to other folks (inefficiently?) who have handed over some of th e ir own “green safety cushion.”

Don’t slap the hands th a t have helped you.

C o lleen C o n n o rEastpointe

Bottom-line mentalityI see th a t Phil Power, the owner of

the Observer & Eccentric newspa­pers, is running again for elective office as one of our “convenient Democrats.” Power is the button- down collar type: Oxford no less. Now he is up for re-election as one of the Board of Regents a t the University of Michigan.

Mr. Power, who heads up a very formidable array of newspapers in his Hometown Community Network Inc., also has been dabbling in M ichigan Dem ocratic politics for about as long as the Observer news­papers have been unionized. In fact, of the myriad newspaper properties owned by Power, only the Observer & Eccentric has contracts with labor unions.

As the Brighton Argus (nonunion Power paper) reported on May 6,

•fry

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Livingston County Democratic Party C hair Joseph C arney in troduced Power as an “early and consistent example of a business owner” in the Democratic Party.

If Phil Power is an example of a business owner in the Democratic Party, then it’s no wonder th a t the Labor Party has been gaining sup­port in the ranks of workers.

W hen you have Ju d y Reid Fearnside, vice chair of the Livingston County Democratic Party, m aking statem ents th a t Guild Local 22 pickets “lacked character” and th a t they were like “sharks closing in for a feeding frenzy,” then Democrats are indeed in trouble. Those com­m ents came in response to the Guild’s leafleting of Power’s speaking appearance before Livingston County Democrats May 2.

I walked the picket line for two years with my fellow sisters and brothers from not only the Guild but five o ther unions as well. W hen Power says he’s bargaining in good faith w ith his unions, it sounds a lot like the rhetoric of Tim Kelleher and F ran k Vega of the D etroit Newspapers.

Power is quoted in his Argus news­paper as saying he has no intentions of provoking a strike to break the unions, even though he is dem and­ing huge health insurance co-pay­m ents despite m aking record profits because of the labor dispute w ith the News and Free Press.

Maybe it’s tim e for the newspaper unions to organize the re s t of Power’s non-union corporate empire.

Mr. Power, we employees a t the Observer & Eccentric hope th a t you personally intervene or take part in the negotiations w ith the Guild and the pressm en’s Local 13-N. We hope you abandon the bottom-line m en­tality of your co-pays and no wage increases.

I walked the line for two years before I came to the O&E papers. If I have to, I’ll do it again.

Tom W ald ronObserver Pressroom stafferLocal 13-N GCIU

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Write us at the JournalThe Detroit Sunday Journal

welcomes letters to the editor. They m ust include the au thor’s name, address and telephone num ber for verification, bu t will be published with au thor’s name and city only. Mail to the Detroit Sunday Journal, 450 W. Fort, Detroit 48226; fax to 313-964- 5554, or e-mail to [email protected].