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The Detroit Sunday Journal:: November 2-8, 1997
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Detroit
Sunday Journal
NOVEMBER 2-8, 1997
VOL. 2. ISS. 51
[page missing]
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Detroit
Sunday Journal
NOVEMBER 2-8, 1997
VOL. 2. ISS. 51
[page missing]
Page 3 - [see page image]
Detroit
Sunday Journal
NOVEMBER 2-8, 1997
VOL. 2. ISS. 51
[page missing]
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PAGE 4
THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL
NOVEMBER 2, 1997
Hip-hop summit seeks to empower youth
By Darren A. Nichols
Journal Staff Writer
Young people have power.
And hip-hop is their voice, says
Khary Turner
Turner’s NAACP Young Adult
Committee will host its second
annual Hip-Hop Summit and
Concert Saturday at Martin Luther
King High School, 3200 East
Lafayette.
The summit, scheduled for 9 to 3,
is aimed at ages 13-18 and young
adults who can relate to hip-hop cul
ture. The event costs $15, which
includes lunch and an NAACP
membership.
More than 400 are expected to
attend.
“The summit is definitely an
instrument in giving power to the
voice of young people,” said Turner,
who chairs the NAACP Young Adult
Committee. “This gives them an
avenue to talk about issues that
affect them daily. The best thing
about this is that it brings together
youth and adults who may not
understand youths.”
This year’s summit theme is “The
Hip-Hop Nation: To the Bridge or to
the Grave.”
Turner said the point is that
young people’s choices will take
them to either place, and one thing
the Young Adult Committee wants
to do is ensure they make the cor
rect choice.
“I’m very excited and proud the
Young Adult Committee created
this summit designed to help our
youth,” said Detroit NAACP
President Rev. Wendell Anthony.
“The future of hip-hop and its evo
lution are tied to the future of our
young people because they often
express themselves through hip-hop
culture.”
The summit will include work
shops on money, drugs, sex, violence
and the family from a hip-hop per
spective. There will also be a panel
discussion on the development of
hip-hop, the culture as a way of
activism and bridging the gap of
intergenerational conflict.
After the workshops, there will be
a concert featuring Detroit poet
Jessica Care Moore, a former three
time winner on Showtime at the
Apollo. Other performers will
include the MAD Klick, the
Almighty Drednaughtz, the
Lokasts, Truppaz Large and poets
Liz Whitaker and Em Roupe.
“Adults need to understand that
hip-hop is a culture and meets all of
the criteria of a culture,” Turner
said. “If parents come to understand
this, they will learn to appreciate
the whole phenomenon with a high
er degree of respect and apprecia
tion.”
Anthony agrees.
“I hope the summit builds upon
the legacy of Summit 1.”
More than 250 young people
attended the first Hip-Hop Summit,
where young people addressed
issues surrounding the killing of
rapper Tupac Shakur. Shakur, who
was 25 when he was gunned down
in a drive-by shooting in Las Vegas
last year, was one of the most cele
brated and misunderstood rappers
of the hip-hop world. Shakur sold
nearly $90 million in records before
his death.
The Hip-Hop Summit is in line
with the NAACP’s commitment to
reach young people in the city. Last
month its Youth Council sponsored a
Silent March and Rally in response
to violence in Detroit.
The Detroit Branch Young Adult
Committee, whose members are 18
to 35, addresses issues that concern
that age group. The committee has
sponsored cultural events, including
the viewing of the film Panther, the
Martin Luther King Jr. Songfest and
the first Hip-Hop Summit.
For information call the NAACP
Detroit Branch, 313-871-2087.
Voters’ Guide to Detroit Issues
D etroit voters will choose
between candidates for
mayor, city clerk and council,
and vote on eight proposals
on Election Day Tuesday.
Polls are open 7 a.m.-8 p.m.
Candidates for mayor are incumbent
Dennis Archer and Ed Vaughn, and for
city clerk, incumbent Jackie Currie
and Clayton Johnson.
Candidates for four-year terms on
the council are Tom Barrow, incum
bent Clyde Cleveland, Ken Cockrel Jr.,
incumbent Sheila Cockrel, Bettie
Cook-Scott, incumbent Kay Everett,
Frank Hayden, incumbent Gil Hill,
incumbent Nicholas Hood III, Evelyn
Lucas, incumbent Maryann Mahaffey,
Bernard Parker, incumbent Brenda
Scott, Alma Stallworth, incumbent
Alberta Tinsley-Williams, Ted Wallace,
Jewel Ware and Mary Waters.
“The maximum number of (council)
candidates you can vote for is nine,”
according to the Election Commission.
“If you vote for more than nine, your
vote for City Council will not be count
ed.”
Proposals include:
Shall the City of Detroit by ordi :
nance impose an annual excise tax
upon a person licensed to operate a
casino within the City of Detroit at a
rate of nine and nine/tenths percent
(9.9%) of the adjusted gross receipts
received by the licensee from gaming
in order to provide funds to the City of
Detroit for the following purposes, as
authorized by the Michigan Gaming
Control and Revenue Act,
as amended:
■ Hiring, training and deployment of
street patrol officers.
■ Neighborhood and downtown eco
nomic development programs
designed to create local jobs.
■ Public safety programs such as
emergency medical services, fire
department programs and street
lighting.
■ Anti-gang and youth development
programs.
■ Other programs that are designed
to contribute to the improvement of
the quality of life in the City of
Detroit.
■ Relief to the taxpayers of the city
from one or more taxes or fees
imposed by the City of Detroit.
■ The costs of capital improvements.
■ Road repairs and improvements.
PROPOSAL B
Shall the City of Detroit impose a
municipal services fee upon a person
licensed to operate a casino within
the City of Detroit equal to the
greater of one and one-quarter per
cent (1.25%) of adjusted gross
receipts received by the licensee
from gaming or $4,000,000 per year
to be collected as authorized by the
Michigan Gaming Control and
Revenue Act in order to provide
funds to the City of Detroit to con
tribute to the cost of hosting casi
nos?
Do you favor the authorization
and issuance of General Obligation
Bonds, payable from taxes the City is
allowed to levy in addition to Charter
and statutory limits, in an amount
necessary to pay the principal and
interest thereon in the principal sum
of an amount not to exceed
$35,000,000 for the purpose of project
improvements to various neighbor
hood redevelopment and housing
rehabilitation programs and for eco
nomic development projects?
Do you favor the authorization and
issuance of General Obligation
Bonds, payable from taxes the City is
allowed to levy in addition to Charter
and statutory limits, in an amount
necessary to pay the principal and
interest thereon in the principal sum
of an amount not to exceed
$15,000,000 for the purpose of acqui
sition, construction, renovation or
rehabilitation of public safety projects
relating to Police, Fire and
Emergency Medical Services (EMS)
facilities?
Do you favor the authorization and
issuance of General Obligation
Bonds, payable from taxes the City is
allowed to levy in addition to Charter
and statutory limits, in an amount
necessary to pay the principal and
interest thereon in the principal sum
of an amount not to exceed
$40,000,000 for the purpose of
improving street and alley lighting,
emergency medical communications,
service extensions and improvements
required to supply light and power?
PROPOSAL F
Do you favor the authorization and
issuance of General Obligation Bonds,
payable from taxes the City is allowed
to levy in addition to Charter and
statutory limits, in an amount neces
sary to pay the principal and interest
thereon in the principal sum not to
exceed $7,500,000 for the purpose of
acquisition, construction, renovation
or rehabilitation of various City of
Detroit municipal facilities?
Do you favor the authorization and
issuance of General Obligation Bonds,
payable from taxes the City is allowed
to levy in addition to Charter and
statutory limits, in an amount neces
sary to pay the principal and interest
thereon in the principal sum not to
exceed $38,000,000 for the purpose of
acquisition, construction, renovation
or rehabilitation of Recreation, Zoo
and Cultural facilities?
PROPOSAL H
Do you favor the authorization and
issuance of General Obligation Bonds,
payable from taxes the City is allowed
to levy in addition to Charter and
statutory limits, in an amount neces
sary to pay the principal and interest
thereon in the principal sum not to
exceed $7,500,000 for the purpose of
acquisition, construction, renovation
or rehabilitation of various Detroit
Public Library facilities?
Page 5 - [see page image]
.
.‘v......
NOVEMBER 2, 1997 THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL PAGE 5
Vote November 4th
Su voto es su voz. Your vote is your voice.
Exercise your right as an American to choose the leaders who
will represent you in Detroit for the next four years.
Vote for Councilwoman
Maryann Mahaffey
Council President Maryann Mahaffey
Mayor Dennis Archer
Council President Maryann Mahaffey and Dennis Archer
need our support to keep Detroit moving forward.
|> Detroit Citv Council:
Maryann Mahaffey ★ Ken Cockrel Jr. ★
Sheila Cockrel ★ Brenda Scott
Alberta Tinsley-Williams
Citv Clerk
Jackie L. Currie
★ Arrested for action supporting striking newspaper workers.
Re-invest in Detroit... re-elect Maryann Mahaffey
because Mahaffey makes it happen for you!
Paid for by the Spanish speaking Democrats. Joe Estrada, President, 3683 Gilbert. Detroit 48210, (313) 894-7883
Ted Wallace
Gil Hill
Page 6 - [see page image]
PAGE 6
THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL
NOVEMBER 2, 1997
Judge says strikers
due unemployment
JUDGE, From Page 1
benefits under the Michigan Employment
Security Act. Previously they were denied ben
efits because they were considered “involved in
a labor dispute in active progress.”
Ashford reversed a decision made in March
1996 by the Michigan Employment Security
Commission, recently renamed the Michigan
Unemployment Agency.
Ashford listed about 800 workers who are eli
gible to collect. Checks will range up to $7,800,
based on $300 for 26 weeks; amounts will
reflect individual circumstances, such as the
number of weeks an applicant filed claims and
his or her wage before filing a claim - essen
tially what the applicant made while employed
at the papers.
It isn’t known when the checks will go out.
Union lawyer Richard McHugh said he expects
the newspapers to appeal, but that wouldn’t
stop the payment of benefits.
Ashford said if some strikers deserve to be
paid but are not listed among the 800, his rul
ing covers them as well.
If the companies were to win on appeal, strik
ers would not have to repay the money until all
appeals are over, which should be several years
from now.
McHugh said Ashford’s decision that workers
are permanently replaced does not affect other
deliberations on their rights to reclaim their
jobs.
Although the Michigan Unemployment
Agency will pay the benefits, McHugh said the
Detroit newspapers eventually would foot the
bill.
“Employers pay a payroll tax on current
wages,” said McHugh. “It’s a percentage of their
payroll. If they have a higher rate of claims,
their payroll tax goes up. Over about three
years the company will be expected to repay
this.”
One of the 800 on the list is locked-out print
er John Martin. “It’s about time a little justice
came down the line,” he said Thursday.
“This is heartening news,” said Lou Mleczko,
president of Newspaper Guild Local 22 and a
member of the Metropolitan Council of
Newspaper Unions. “Judge Ashford made a
courageous call. I’m sure there was political
pressure from the governor’s office right down
to the bureaucratic ranks at MESC.”
John Truscott, spokesman for Gov. John
Engler, said, “There is absolutely no truth” that
the governor’s office intervened. “Our office has
never gotten involved in these issues.”
McHugh said he believed the original ruling
that denied benefits “was an attempt to avoid
making a difficult decision in a charged atmo
sphere. They just wanted to punt it to a higher
level. That was in March 1996. We should have
been paid then.
“We won this time because we had a neutral
fact-fmder who was willing to follow the law
and apply it to the facts. The disappointment is
that the agency was not able to do that in
March of 1996.”
An appeal of Ashford’s decision would go to
the Michigan Employment Security Board of
Review, then a circuit court, the Michigan
Court of Appeals and the Michigan Supreme
Court.
Ashford is with the Michigan Unemployment
Agency’s Office of Appeals.
the ULP strike notebook
Lansing workers vote out Guild
Journal photo by DAYMON J. HARTLEY
A scary decision
Austin Ramos, 7, ponders his next move in a game at a Halloween party
recently for children of locked-out newspaper workers.
By Alan Forsyth
Journal Staff Writer
E ditorial staff members of
the Lansing State
Journal will no longer
have a union.
Editorial workers on
Wednesday voted out the
Newspaper Guild 32-29. Three
eligible voters did not vote.
The State Journal is owned by
Gannett Co., which also owns
the Detroit News, USA Today
and about 90 other papers.
Leo Ducharme, an internation
al representative for the
Newspaper Guild, which is part
of the Communication Workers
of America, said:
“The outcome was not an anti
union vote. It was an issue of
workers being manipulated by a
powerful corporation. It was
Gannett’s cynical ploy to with
hold benefits and pay raises
until the more desperate work
ers gave up to its demands.”
Management had recommend
ed workers vote out their union.
Silverman turns tail
Detroit News publisher Mark
Silverman tried to keep a happy
face as he spoke to the American
Arabic and Jewish Friends at
the Southfield Civic Center
Tuesday on “How Can a
Newspaper Be Fair to All Its
Readers.”
Silverman was willing to
answer questions but only ones
submitted on 3-by-5-inch cards.
When locked-out workers in the
audience noticed that their ques
tions were not being asked, some
just stood up and asked how
that censorship jibed with
Silverman’s stated love of the
First Amendment.
Silverman told the audience
that “the unions unconditionally
surrendered” in February when
they made offers to return to
work.
But after a few minutes of
unrestricted questioning, it was
Silverman who decided to sur
render. His three bodyguards
took the publisher and their
video camera and left.
The seven Southfield police
officers in the room had nothing
to do. Nor did the nine waiting
in squad cars outside. Or the
dogs in a police car.
Some members of the audience
said locked-out workers had
ruined their meeting. But Fred J.
Fechheimer, a Dykema Gossett
lawyer who is a co-chair of the
Friends group, told the union
members:
“I understand that you do not
have a more appropriate forum
in which to raise your ques
tions.”
New faces for NLRB
President Bill Clinton Tuesday
announced the nomination of a
Democrat and two Republicans
to the National Labor Relations
Board, breaking a logjam.
The Democrat is Wilma B.
Liebman, deputy director of the
Federal Mediation and
Conciliation Service. The
Republicans are both manage
ment-side labor lawyers: Peter J.
Hurtgen of Florida and Robert
Brame of Virginia.
Early in 1997 Clinton nomi
nated Sarah Fox, a Democrat,
but the Senate never confirmed
her. Published reports have said
her confirmation will be part of a
deal that’s been made by the
White House and Senate
Republicans and Democrats.
The five-seat NLRB is short
two members and about to have
four vacancies. Chairman
William B. Gould IVs term
expires in August, and the recess
appointments of John Higgins
and Fox expire at the end of the
current congressional session,
expected as early as Friday. As
recess appointees, they did not
need Senate confirmation.
Confirmation of the new
appointees will probably be after
Congress reconvenes in January.
The NLRB is considering
appeals of Judge Thomas Wilks’
June decision, in which he found
that the News, the Free Press
and Detroit Newspapers caused
and prolonged the newspaper
strike by their unfair labor prac
tices.
Learning young
Laura and Melissa Thornton -
daughters of A1 Thornton, a
locked-out member of Teamsters
Local 372 - like going to brown-
bag seminars in the library at
Chatterton Middle School in
Warren.
But they weren’t happy when
they heard the announcement
that the speaker at the next
lunch meeting would be a Detroit
Free Press photographer. The two
girls spoke to teachers and coun
selors, they said, but felt they
were getting nowhere.
Then, said Laura, 13, they and
friends “went around telling peo
ple not to come to the brown-bag
seminar because they were hav
ing the person from the Free
Press. ... We got a lot of people to
say they wouldn’t come.”
By day’s end, recalled Melissa,
11, “They said it was canceled
due to a lack of interest.”
“It was kind of nice,” said
Laura, “that we stuck up for
what we believe in and we won.”
Teachers said the cancellation
reflected a reconsideration based
partly on the children’s reaction.
The teachers are represented by
the Michigan Education
Association.
Minor scam
The Free Press did a 24-page
See NOTEBOOK, Page 8
Page 7 - [see page image]
NOVEMBER 2, 1997
THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL
PAGE 7
Journalists won’t take tough look in mirror
By Kate DeSmet
Journal Staff Writer
W hen we worked as jour
nalists for the Detroit
daily newspapers, we
believed in our inalien
able right to question. We joked that
no matter where we were in the world,
we had the right to ask somebody,
anybody, a question. If we were out
essay
shopping for green peppers and a
woman walked by with an artichoke
on her nose we, of all people, could
step right up and ask her why. We
weren’t nosy, we were professional.
And the harder the question, particu
larly those aimed at “important” tar
gets like politicians or prosecutors, the
better we were at our profession.
But during this labor struggle
against the owners of the two newspa
pers something has become achingly
apparent. Journalists are keeping the
toughest questions to themselves.
Why? Because while they can dog the
president on budget or sexual mat
ters, and while they can run after a
Big Three CEO for an answer, they
can’t open their mouths to form the
questions that would expose the scan
dal in their own business, the business
of newspapering.
They can’t or they won’t, or both.
Less than two weeks ago the Detroit
chapter of the Society of Professional
Journalists met for dinner in Dear
born. It invited three local newspaper
publishers to speak, including Mark
Silverman, publisher of Gannett’s
Detroit News. He had a dining room
full of professionals who get paid to
ask questions - editors, reporters,
columnists.
Few apparently were aware that
behind the scenes the president of the
Journal photo by GEORGE WALDMAN
The Society of Professional Journalists
agreed to censor questions to Detroit
News Publisher Mark Silverman.
local chapter, Marsha Stopa of Crain’s
Detroit Business, and SPJ board
members had already decided that no
one be allowed to ask questions from
the floor. Audience members had to
write their questions on small white
cards. Once they were sent up to
Stopa, she announced that absolutely
no questions would be allowed about
the newspaper strike/lockout. Such
“disruptions” would not be tolerated,
she said.
Silverman couldn’t have been treat
ed better if he’d gone to a high-society
tea party (though society matrons
might not be as polite as SPJ about
Silverman’s three private security
goons-in-tow). Even the good folks
from the Macomb Daily, who have
blistered the Detroit News in recent
weeks about such things as the News’
inept, irresponsible reporting on the
health of Lake St. Clair, were forced
into silence.
After the dinner, locked-out workers
confronted Stopa. She admitted it’d
been a difficult decision, but said if
she’d allowed questions from the floor,
Silverman would have walked out.
Less than a week before the SPJ
dinner, some 800 journalists with the
alternative media gathered in New
York for the second Media in
Democracy Congress. The first one,
held two years ago, ignored the issue
of labor unions. This time, because of
well-placed protests, the Congress fea
tured labor on a number of panels.
One discussion included Steven
Greenhouse, labor writer for the New
York Times who is considered one of
the best reporters on that beat.
However, Greenhouse has not covered
the Detroit newspaper strike, and
what has appeared in his paper by
other writers has often been poorly
reported and tilted in favor of the
newspaper owners.
Greenhouse was asked why he did
not cover the newspaper strike. His
reasons ranged from a lack of time to
a lack of interest on the part of editors
and readers. He said he had to follow
certain rules in reporting, including
writing what most of his readers
would be interested in.
Since when did that stop reporters
who believed a story was just too
damned important? The truth behind
most heroic news reporting efforts is
that a journalist, despite every sort of
obstacle from owners, editors, sources
and readers, perseveres to tell the tale.
In the case of Detroit’s newspaper
struggle, most journalists don’t think
that the battle between employees and
the nation’s two largest newspaper
chains has anything to do with news
or with themselves. Rather than see
ing themselves as members of the
working class, journalists see them
selves as white-collar, college-educat
ed watchdogs of the public and private
sectors (every sector, that is, but their
own).
Silverman couldn’t
have been treated
better if he’d gone
to a high-society
tea party (though
society matrons
might not be
as polite as
SPJ about
Silverman’s
three private security
goons-in-tow).
We want journalists to ask tough
questions of people in power because
most working-class folks never get the
chance to sidle up to the chairman of
Union Pacific or Little Caesars Pizza.
We need bulldogs as well as watch
dogs in the press, but if journalists
don’t recognize themselves as working
class, how can they have any bark or
bite?
One look into the future of journal
ism does not bode well. At Central
Michigan University, journalism stu
dents recently invited Tom Curley,
publisher of Gannett’s USA Today, to
speak. They asked him all sorts of
fawning questions like “How much
money do you make?” to which Curley
replied, “$800,000 a year,” and some
students squealed with delight.
Others asked him about the future of
newspapers and technology. All soft
ball stuff. Then an activist with the
Detroit newspaper strike asked
Curley why no Gannett newspaper,
including his own, had reviewed “The
Chain Gang” by Richard McCord. The
book exposes Gannett’s predatory and
illegal practices used against compet
ing newspapers. Curley’s answer was
that “self-coverage is difficult.” When
the activist tried to ask a follow-up
question, students booed, hissed and
told the questioner to shut up. One
even called the activist “a piece of
labor union white trash.”
Maybe if the CMU journalism
department had done a better job of
teaching students about the struggle
ravaging journalism in their own
home state, the clash in that auditori
um would have been between an over
paid, irresponsible Gannett newspa
per publisher and a group of informed,
future working-class journalists of
America.
Is that too much to ask?
Kate DeSmet was a reporter at the
Detroit News for 17 years before going
on strike in July 1995. She has been
fired three times for taking part in
nonviolent civil disobedience against
the newspaper companies.
UAW members will vote on agreement
By Martha Hindes
Journal Automotive Writer
Officials of UAW Local 163 at GM’s
Romulus Engine Plant are making
plans to vote next week on a tentative
agreement reached just minutes after
a midnight Tuesday strike deadline
passed without incident.
The new local contract agreement
covers some 1,300 hourly workers who
make V-6 and V-8 engines for several
GM trucks and cars, including the
popular fifth-generation Corvette.
There was some confusion about the
time of the settlement as talks contin
ued up to the 11:59 p.m. Tuesday
deadline without interruption or an
extension. At that time, GM
spokespersons began spreading the
word an agreement had been reached,
although bargaining continued
beyond that time, according to UAW
spokesman Reg McGhee.
“They decided at 11:59 (not to walk
out) and kept talking,” said McGhee.
“They did not extend the deadline but
reached an agreement within a short
period of time.”
GM spokesman Chuck Licari, in
confirming a settlement, said the
plant was calm as the deadline
approached.
“No one walked out early,” he said.
“No one jumped the gun.”
The plant makes the 4.3 liter V-6,
and aluminum and cast iron V-8
engines for several GM vehicles,
including the Chevy Blazer and GMC
Jimmy and Oldsmobile Bravada.
Auto analyst David Healy, with New
York-based Burnham Securities, said
a strike at the plant probably would
not have had the impact of strikes at
other components plants with the
potential of shutting down most GM
manufacturing facilities. The majority
of vehicles that use engines from the
Romulus plant have more than the
average 60 days’ supply with some as
high as 120 days, he said.
“It’s a mixed bag,” said Healy. “There
are not enough Corvettes, but there
certainly are too many Camaros,
Firebirds and Bravadas. Two-doors of
any stripe are not selling very well.”
The tentative agreement leaves only
two locals without contracts as part of
the 1996 GM-UAW national agree
ment that was ratified last fall. About
200 members of UAW Local 572, who
maintain GM’s headquarters building
in the New Center Area, remain with
out a local contract. Also, “several
dozen” at the Electro-Matic plant in
LaGrange, 111., have not yet settled,
said Licari.
Page 8 - [see page image]
PAGE 8
THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL
NOVEMBER 2, 1997
New housing in the works
UAW strikers, MascoTech
further apart, union says
HOUSES, From Page 3
to patrol to prevent illegal dumping -
for the last year while project coordi
nators “got our act together,” said
Kovari.
While celebrating the good news
about new housing, meeting-goers also
pinned down public officials on
enforcement of pollution laws and $12
million in funding for recreation and
drug programs.
Signs ringed the church complaining
about noxious odors coming from the
Detroit Department of Water and
Sewerage wastewater treatment plant
and several nearby industrial plants.
Residents told of several companies
that they claim continue to violate pol
lution laws and demanded that public
officials “enforce the laws on the
books.” Officials from a variety of orga
nizations and the recreation depart
ments of several cities committed their
expertise and money to turn what pre
senters call a $12 million Concept
Paper on Recreation-Centered Drug
Prevention into reality.
“If they send money for enforce
ment, they can send money for preven
tion,” said Edith Suggs, who outlined
By Eric Freedman
Journal Staff Writer
EAST LANSING - Experts and
opponents of nuclear power and
nuclear weapons will gather
Saturday to map a strategy for a
nuclear-free zone in the Great Lakes.
The daylong session at Michigan
State University will include work
shops focusing on tactics, research
into nuclear issues and ways to com
municate with the public about
health and environmental dangers.
“As custodians of one-third of the
world’s fresh water, we in the Great
Lakes must restore an uncontami
nated environment for future genera
tions,” said Anabel Dwyer of the
Peace Education Center in East
Lansing. “We’re bringing nuclear
WATSON, From Page 3
supplies with their own money, the
board that cried broke during their
contract negotiations this year agreed
to shell out an estimated quarter mil
lion to $800,000 to buy out the rest of
Snead’s contract.
While second graders were learning
how to solve problems with fighting,
the people who lead the system
engage in a shameful display of public
bickering, backbiting, name-calling
and fmger-pointing that would get
them sent to the principal’s office if
they were in school.
Snead’s abrupt departure paved the
way for this troubled school district to
the concept paper during the two-hour
meeting. She is a member of Union
Second Baptist Church in River Rouge.
The goal is to refurbish and fully
staff neighborhood recreation centers
and parks between the hours of 3 p.m.
to 8 p.m., the peak period for juvenile
crime.
U.S. Rep. Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick,
D-Detroit, promised federal dollars for
the prevention plan.
“Rest assured, we are going to bring
them home to you,” she said, adding
that she was speaking for herself and
for Congressmen John Conyers Jr., D-
Detroit, and John Dingell, D-Dearborn.
As pleased as residents were to hear
several Downriver and Detroit officials
promising their help, they expressed
frustration with the absence of Detroit
and River Rouge mayors Dennis
Archer and Greg Joseph. During the
discussion about pollution laws
enforcement, dozens of meeting-gores
began shouting “Where’s Dennis
Archer?”
And one citizen particularly annoyed
with Joseph told the crowd, “Let’s hold
the next meeting in his office.”
Shawn Ellis is a locked-out member
of Teamsters Local 372.
power and nuclear weapons people
together.”
She said Michigan has 25 corpora
tions that manufacture components
for nuclear weapons or the planes
that carry them.
And organizers of the program,
“Restoring the Nuclear-Free Great
Lakes Basin,” said 33 sites in the
state had substantial quantities of
radioactive materials.
Speakers include civil rights and
peace activist William Sloane Coffin
Jr., physicist Daniel Axelrod, natural
resources Professor Bunyan Bryant
of the University of Michigan and
City College of New York anthropol
ogist Glenn Alcaley.
For more information, call (517)
337-8087.
have its fifth superintendent in fewer
than 10 years. The names at the top
change, but the system continues to
operate the same way. The superin
tendent runs afoul of the board
because he or she is too aggressive or
too passive, too accommodating or too
arrogant, too daring or too cautious.
The board pokes its nose into the
daily minutia of the district’s opera
tions. The community accuses
everyone of ignoring it. And, of course,
someone will mismanage money that
was intended for the welfare of kids.
So Wednesday really wasn’t any dif
ferent. It was just another day filled
with students waiting for someone to
make time for them.
MascoTech and UAW Local 155 met
just over a week ago for their first
negotiating session since the strike
began three months ago.
But Local 155 president Bruce
Steeves said the situation is worse.
“The company is saying it is offering
employment to only 22 at MascoTech
in Fraser, and we had 140 on our
seniority list,” said Steeves. “The com
pany also says if that proposal is rati
fied, each individual to be recalled
would need to pass a test.”
Steeves said MascoTech Forming
Technologies offered 50 jobs in its final
offer before the strike began Aug. 1.
The offer was resoundingly defeated
by union members.
MascoTech spokesman Kurt Ruecke
said: “We updated our proposal, and it
is in the union’s hands. They are
deciding whether they want to pro-
Variety show
ROUNDUP, From Page 6
special tabloid section on the
Michigan-MSU football game that
was sold at the game Oct. 25, but the
Free Press put an Oct. 27 date on it.
The point was to boost weekday cir
culation figures and to avoid sharing
those boosted figures with the Detroit
News, with which it publishes joint
weekend editions.
One single-copy driver said he was
instructed to tell dealers they could
give away the section, include it in
the Saturday paper or sell it and
keep the 35 cents.
The word gets out
C&G Publications delivered 3-by-8-
inch cards to 300,000 readers of their
suburban newspapers that read, “Tell
Detroit Newspapers to obey the law!
Don’t buy or read The Detroit News,
Detroit Free Press, or USA Today.”
The Metropolitan Council of
Newspaper Unions sent the message
to communities in Macomb County,
southern Oakland County and north
eastern Wayne County.
Moved and shaken
Movers and Shakers No. VIII at St.
Clair Shores High School last week
brought lots of laughs. It was a fund
raiser for the Metropolitan Council of
Newspaper Unions. Most performers
donated their talents.
It was produced by Mary Hill of
Hill Productions; every year Hill does
a similar production for a charitable
group in need of funds.
The headliners were the Fabulous
Do-Wops: Rich Shubik, Phil Picio,
George Makris and Mike Picio. Dance
groups came from Anita’s Theatre
Dance and Performing Arts of
Sterling Heights; Deborah Frontczak
sang Broadway tunes.
Betty Padgett of Harrison Twp. was
pose it to the membership.”
Ruecke would not confirm or deny
Steeves’ version of the MascoTech pro
posal. “We’re negotiating. I am not
going to get into the details of the con
tract,” he said.
Steeves said of the MascoTech offer,
“The bargaining committee decided
not to respond, because they would
take away more than they were going
to take away before.”
Union members continue to draw
strike benefits of $150 a week.
Steeves says he believes production
at the plant is down to two parts from
60. The plant facade is boarded up,
and Huffmaster security guards are
on patrol.
Picket-line incidents led to several
arrests in September. Steeves said he
knew of no further incidents.
- Alan Forsyth
brings laughs
a bit embarrassed to win three of the
four door prizes.
Being the strong supporter that
she is, she gave back the color TV
she won so it can be used otherwise.
Her reason: “My best wishes and
prayers go to all the newspaper
workers.”
ACOSS takes to skies
ACOSS, the Action Coalition of
Strikers and Supporters, paid for a
plane to circle over Spartan Stadium
in East Lansing during the
Michigan-Michigan State football
game last weekend. It trailed a sign
reading “Boycott Detroit News, Free
Press and USA Today.”
Earlier that day an ACOSS crew
gathered at MascoTech Forming
Technologies, at Kelly and 15 Mile, in
Fraser. Workers at the plant have
been on strike since Aug. 1.
The ACOSS crew went down
neighboring streets to knock on
doors. “We just tell them we’re news
paper strikers and we’re still locked
out contrary to what they are being
told,” said Armand Nevers of DTU
Local 18. “It’s been real productive.
The reception has been great. Even
the people who don’t take a lawn
sign indicate support for us or at
least take a flier.
“The biggest obstacle is getting
more people to come out and join us.”
That morning another ACOSS
crew was in Detroit supporting the
campaign of City Council President
Maryann Mahaffey.
Ox roast
An ox roast to benefit the Detroit
newspaper unions’ effort is scheduled
for 6:30 p.m. Nov. 15 at IBEW Local
58, 1358 Abbott east of Trumbull.
Call 313-438-0968.
Alan Forsyth is a locked-out Detroit
News copy editor.
No nukes are wanted here
Harsh lesson for grown-ups
Page 9 - [see page image]
NOVEMBER 2, 1997
THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL
PAGE 9
Exceptions
are tough
to explain
Ronald Ruffin, director of the
Municipal Parking Department,
is one of the chief architects of
the Code Six book, a 10-page
document that explains who and
what areas are exempt from the
city of Detroit’s parking laws.
“Usually it’s a sign change.
Based on experience, we need to
accommodate a business or resi
dent, and we say to support
your business we’re going to
come in and make a considera
tion until the sign is changed,”
Ruffin said.
There were numerous exam
ples of people and places in the
Code Six book that did not meet
these criteria, however, and
Ruffin often had difficulty
explaining the exceptions.
Ruffin said several streets
were exempted from parking
enforcement because he had
received requests from either
the police department or the
court system. It was not clear
who in the police department
and court had requested the
special treatment or why.
Ruffin also said:
■ It does not make sense to tick
et city cars, particularly law
enforcement vehicles, because
they may be working or need to
run out on an emergency.
■ No one person or business
should be on the list permanent
ly-
■ The list needs to be reviewed
periodically.
■ A city ordinance to allow cars
to be parked in front of restau
rants and businesses until
valets move the cars would help
solve a lot of problems.
■ Frequently, old street signs do
not reflect current parking
needs on a given street, he said.
Traffic patterns have changed
substantially during the past
decade or two, often without
street signs being changed,
Ruffin said.
“If there were no regulations,
we would have parking gridlock.
This list is meant to be cus
tomer-driven,” Ruffin said.
The ticketing of judges’ cars is
a non-issue, according to Ruffin.
Most judges handle tickets by
getting theirs thrown out of
court, he said.
“That’s not true, 36th District
Court Administrator John Paul
said. He explained that the
court worked out an agreement
with the parking department to
allow the judges to park free
next to the building.
- Michael McBride
■ BKSS'.
; lb
H
/
Journal photo by GEORGE WALDMAN
Double-parked cars are tended by a valet at the Detroit Club.
Document lists free Detroit parking spots
PARKING, From Page 1
issues. But it also contains a number of
other exempt sites and selected individ
uals who can park citywide without fear
of getting ticketed.
Among sites and individuals are:
■ The perimeter of Tiger Stadium.
■ Two mayoral appointees, including
the deputy mayor.
■ Thirteen employees of the city’s park
ing department.
■ The front of the Opus One restaurant,
Intermezzo restaurant, Greektown and
Ted’s Restaurant in the downtown area.
■ One of Bing Steel’s facilities, owned by
the former Detroit Pistons star. .
■ 36th District Court.
Parking director Ruffin said the
Detroit police requested special consid
erations for Tiger Stadium and the may-
oral appointees while the courts
requested exempt parking around 36th
District Court.
He also said the parking department
employees, who had been given tempo
rary permission to park on a city-owned
lot during construction at the Veterans
Memorial, should not have been listed
for citywide exemption. Ruffin removed
their names from the list after talking
with the Sunday Journal.
Such upscale establishments as the
Detroit Club, Opus One and Intermezzo
get the benefit of relaxed parking
because they have valets on duty, Ruffin
said. Ted’s, a popular soul food diner in
Capitol Park, does not have valets, but
still gets free parking. Ruffin said the
owner has requested new signs that will
allow parking.
□
□
The city of Detroit’s Code Six book
lists vehicles and areas where city
parking laws are largely ignored.
Here are some blocks where “relaxed
enforcement” is in effect:
■ Monroe (both sides) between St.
Antoine and Beaubien
■ Madison (both sides) from Brush to
Beaubien
■ Brush (east side) from Madison to
Beacon
■ East Adams, Elizabeth to John R
■ Elizabeth (both sides) between Park
and Woodward
■ Park (both sides) from the Fisher
Service Drive to Adams
■ Beacon (south side) from Brush to
Beaubien
■ Livemois (both sides) from Clarita to
Eight Mile Road
In the case of relaxed parking at the
Bing Steel facilities, Ruffin said the
parking authority is following a policy
of trying to be business-friendly.
The discovery of the list confirms
long-standing suspicions that certain
places and individuals receive preferen
tial parking treatment. Ruffin said
individual parking enforcement officers
have historically received lists of
exemptions for their areas. Ruffin said
he combined the lists into one master
document in 1994.
Also listed are entire commercial
blocks where relaxed enforcement is
given at the request of the courts or the
police. (See list above.)
A 1991 study by the Greater Detroit
Chamber of Commerce found there was
ample parking downtown except for the
financial district area. In fact, according
to Kim Jackson of the International
Parking Institute of Fredericksburg, Va.,
lack of parking places is rarely a prob
lem in any city.
The chamber study also found that
much could be done to improve the park
ing situation downtown, particularly
since street parking was based on an
out-of-date 1974 master plan. City and
chamber officials said many of the pro
posals were not implemented.
The study suggested centralizing the
planning, marketing and development
of parking within one department. It
also recommended updating the master
plan, increasing meter times and fees,
re-evaluating parking fines, offering a
free shuttle service and promoting use
of the People Mover and other public
transportation.
The favoritism by Detroit parking offi
cials is a special irritant for many down
town businesses trying to obtain better
treatment within the scope of the law.
Jackie Grant, owner of the Money
Tree Restaurant on West Fort Street
downtown, has been trying for years to
get the city to change the half-hour
parking meters in front of her restau
rant to one-hour meters.
“Thirty minutes for lunch is not
enough, and if we go out to put money in
their meter they still get a ticket, Grant
said. “Who is it that is playing God and
deciding that some restaurants will be
able to stay in business and we don’t get
to be included on that list?”
Page 10 - [see page image]
PAGE 10 NOV. 2, 1997 Co-editors: Susan Watson, Norman Sinclair
Managing Editor: Emily Everett
General Manager: Mike McBride
Published by Detroit Sunday Journal Inc.
450 W. Fort Detroit, Mich. 48226
313-964-5655 Fax: 313-964-5554 E-mail: detjoum@aol.com
Web site: http://www.rust.net/~workers/strike.html
mPMjk Member Michigan Press Association
[iW^f Member National Newspaper Association
Metro NY Labor Communications Council Communicator of the Year
Mahaffey deserves
resounding re-election
FINANCIAL
MARKETS
Investor
Winkler ’97
Back in the breach
N o newspaper ever en
dorsed a candidate more
readily or proudly than
the Detroit Sunday
Journal endorses MARYANN
MAHAFFEY for re-election to the
Detroit City Council. Furthermore,
we strongly urge voters to turn out
in such numbers for Mahaffey that
she retains her post as council pres
ident, a job that goes automatically
to the top vote-getter.
Throughout a long life of public
service, Mahaffey has proven again
and again that she is a voice of rea
son and courage. As a neighborhood
activist, an enthusiast for civil
rights, a champion of labor and an
effective council member, Mahaffey
has proven herself to be a progres
sive, independent and committed
fighter for the public good.
We are particularly proud of
Mahaffey - and eternally grateful
to her - for standing by the strik-
ing/locked-out Detroit newspaper
workers during our long struggle
for justice. When some on council
merely gave lip service to our
cause, Mahaffey made it her own.
She refused to talk to scab writers
from the Detroit News and Detroit
Free Press. She marched with us
and proclaimed in a string of fiery
speeches her commitment to labor
justice. She even went to jail for us
by taking part in peaceful, nonvio
lent sit-ins at the News.
After two decades on City
Council, Mahaffey knows the city
and its people. She may be a shoo-
in for re-election. But having fin
ished second in the primary elec
tion in September, she is fighting to
retain her position as top vote-get
ter and the council presidency. She
needs - and deserves - our help
and our votes.
While no one has done more
than Mahaffey, some other council
members and candidates have
stood by us, too. The Sunday
Journal endorses Clyde Cleveland,
Sheila Cockrel, Ken Cockrel Jr.,
Nicholas Hood III, Bernard Parker
and Alberta Tinsley-Williams for
election or re-election to council
seats. Besides taking up our cause
in the newspaper war, these candi
dates have demonstrated their fit
ness to serve Detroit through their
articulate, reasoned approach to
urban issues.
Which brings us, somewhat
sadly, to the race for mayor. We
know that Dennis Archer will
sweep to re-election. And we
acknowledge that he has wrought
important change for the better in
Detroit’s public image and attitude
about itself. But Archer’s wishy-
washy stand on the newspaper
strike epitomizes the mayor’s all-
too-cautious approach on a range of
public issues.
This is the mayor whose
promised redevelopment vision
turned out to be no more than a
reliance on casinos and new stadi
ums. This is the mayor whose
promise to revamp the city bureau
cracy has gone mostly unfulfilled.
And this is the mayor who
always promised to work for a set
tlement of the newspaper strike
but never found the courage to con
demn the villains who provoked the
strike. His supporters say Archer
needs business support for
Detroit’s redevelopment too much
to denounce the newspaper man
agement outright. That may be so.
But the fact remains that the
mayor has been woefully silent on
the key labor fight that took place
on his watch.
I ike we didn’t know the cold weath
er was coming. For most of
i October, the weather in Det-
roit and most of southeastern
Michigan was so nice it was scary. A
string of relatively warm and clear
days made it nearly possible to believe
winter may have gotten lost on the
way down.
Many of us hate to whine so we
grit our teeth and say over and over
again that this brutal Michigan
weather is what makes us Michigan
folk so tough. South Floridians are
warm weather wimps. They aren’t
tough enough to handle real weather.
But deep down, isn’t there that
private yearning for a switch? It
wouldn’t have to be every year, just
occasionally. A warm weather surprise.
Just the image of all those shocked
Floridians shivering on the beach
wrapped up in parkas, teeth chatter
ing like battery-powered dentures,
staring out at a frozen ocean while we
walked around up here in short pants
and T-shirts in January is somehow so
appealing. This could’ve been that
year. Should’ve been that year.
But then, just when it looked like
we might make it out of October with
nary a cool breeze, the winds showed
up. And the clouds. And the cold. In
some areas, the snow even dropped in.
Time fell back an hour early Sunday
morning, just as it does this same time
every year; the tourists in Florida are
enjoying warm sun and warm ocean
waves, as they also do this time every
year, and we here in Michigan were
once again reminded that Mother
Nature isn’t real big on skipping sea
sons - or on swapping them around.
This is Michigan, the land where
cold and partly cloudy isn’t just a term
used by the weatherman. It’s a way of
life. We know that. We’ve always
known that. We can click our heels
three times, but nothing will change
the fact that this is Michigan.
Sure, the weatherman will do
everything he can to smile and laugh
and tell us all the wonderful reasons
why freezing is a good thing. On the
days when there’s so much snow and
ice that even our own Sonny Eliot
couldn’t draw a happy face on it, we
will hear reports about how much
worse it is elsewhere in the country. If
there’s nothing to smile about here, at
least we should be able to warm our
feet on the anguish of others.
But deep down, beneath the denial
and the happy weather talk, we all
know the truth, don’t we? From this
day forward, with a few brief but
pleasant exceptions, it’s going to be
cold. .Real cold. No, not brisk. Not
invigorating either, and not bracing.
C-O-L-D. Summer is gone, and fall is
stepping out the back door.
And yet, despite it all, we’re still
here. Imagine that. Maybe it’s because
seasons aren’t such bad things after
all. Or maybe it’s because we like the
cold more than we complain about it.
Or maybe there’s more to
Michigan than the weather.
10-second editorial
Corporate compassion:
Target embarrassed itself
by not sharing profits
from Elton John’s
“Candle in the Wind”
with Princess Diana’s
favorite charities. After
being exposed, Target
stores finally found
$100,000 to give.
Following is the
AFL-CIO’s list of
endorsed candi
dates for Detroit
mayor and City
Council. We offer
this for our read
ers’ consideration.
Mayor
Dennis Archer
City Clerk
Jackie Currie
City Council
Maryann Mahaffey, Sheila
Cockrel, Nicholas Hood, Alberta
Tinsley-Williams, Clyde
Cleveland, Gil Hill, Ted Wallace,
Bernard Parker
Page 11 - [see page image]
NOVEMBER 2, 1997
PAGE 11
Clean Lake St. Clair begins with the toothbrush
By David E. Bonior
Our nation has just celebrated the 25th anniver
sary of the Clean Water Act, one of the most suc
cessful environmental and public health laws ever
passed by Congress. Before the law was passed, the
United States was dumping approximately 7 million
tons of untreated sewage into its waterways every
day. Less than half of the population was served by
adequate wastewater treatment facilities. And some
of our waters were so badly contaminated they were
devoid of life. Lake Erie was declared “dead.” The
Cuyahoga River in Cleveland caught fire.
In 1972 our nation made a commitment to clean
water, with each of us doing our part to meet chal
lenging goals and tough new standards. The success
has been widespread. However, as we celebrate past
achievements, we in Macomb County are reminded
of the work still to be done.
In an area like ours, where the surrounding envi
ronment, our jobs and our recreation revolve around
water, we understand that efforts to keep our water
clean must include everybody. Recently we received
the report of the Macomb County Blue Ribbon
Commission that was formed to solve the challenges
facing Lake St. Clair. This group of citizens, public
officials and educators came together in a voluntary
effort to fashion a report aimed at reversing the
degraded state of our lake.
Two of the report’s conclusions especially rang
true: Many combined effects are damaging our
water and we must all take steps at every level to
work toward a solution. No one is exempted from
responsibility, just as no one source deserves all the
blame.
The report does not claim that it will be easy.
Much like when the original Clean Water Act was
enacted, we faced problems that seemed insur
mountable. But just as we did 25 years ago, today we
must renew our commitment to keep moving for
ward. Some of the steps may seem like only a drop
in the bucket. But we must all find our role and then
meet our responsibilities.
What we cannot do is take the attitude that “the
water looks OK to me, so what’s the problem?” Those
of us in Macomb County know that we should not
have to wade through waste to realize we have a
problem.
In this day of worrying about food safety and air
quality, we know that sometimes it’s the things you
can’t see that can hurt you the most. We know that
building a municipal swimming pool is no substitute
for a clean lake or clean waterways. That type of
attitude shows a lack of respect for our water’s eco
nomic importance and the preciousness of our envi
ronment.
The Blue Ribbon Commission calls for action at
every level. Drain owners must uphold their obliga
tions to keep drains free from jams. Local drinking
water suppliers should use the most reliable means
of gauging the effects of chemicals, biomonitoring, to
keep our drinking water safe. We must adopt
stronger, enforceable standards to prevent the
dumping of sewage into common waters. Through
education, monitoring, voluntary efforts and
enforceable protections, we all can be part of the
combined effort to clean Lake St. Clair.
And each of us in our day-to-day living must
remember that we are part of the solution. We can’t
control the amount of water nature puts into our
drainage systems, but we can control how much we
contribute: We can wash our cars on the lawn so that
soapy water doesn’t go down the drain; we can be
conservative with water use during storms so we
don’t overburden our sewerage systems and we can
use water sparingly when brushing our teeth.
We must contribute to the solution to this compli
cated problem without being fooled into thinking
that if we bury our heads in the sand, then the prob
lem will vanish. In the spirit of the anniversary of
the Clean Water Act, we must move forward with
commitment to fulfill the goals set forth 25 years ago
- to make our waters clean and safe.
U.S. Rep. David E. Bonior, D-Mt. Clemens, is House
minority whip.
Global warming? There are hotter problems to address
I read with interest your Oct. 26
editorial, “Sport-utilities no good for
planet’s health.” It is a shame that we
keep debating whether global warm
ing is real or not, while completely
ignoring much bigger global prob
lems with far more serious conse
quences, such as over-population,
over-consumption of resources, and
fast-depleting fossil fuel supplies.
The root causes of these problems
are, respectively, lust, greed and
short-sightedness, which humans
have never been able to overcome.
However, even if we view these prob
lems from the perspective of self-
preservation, self-interest and self
perpetuation, it is inconceivable how
we can go with a “business as usual”
attitude without causing a disastrous
impact on human health and the
environment in the long run.
We have no choice but to take
aggressive measures on a global scale
to reduce population growth rate,
reduce consumer demand, reduce
energy usage, improve energy effi
ciency and find cost-effective, renew
able alternate energy sources.
Pradeep Srivastava
Detroit
Politics isn’t the goal
Did the writer of your Oct. 12 edi
torial “Promises, promises” attend
the event or view it on TV? I was not
in Washington, D.C., for “Stand in the
Gap,” but I did attend a stadium con
ference this summer. The two days
were spent in worship and prayer,
not politics.
letters
No one told us that our wives
should take a “back seat to hubby” or
that the “man is always in charge,” as
your editorial claimed. What was
stressed was responsibility and spiri
tual growth. We were told to lead by
serving our wives and children.
Matthew 20:26 says, “Whoever
desires to become great among you,
let him be your servant.”
Peter K. Ewald Jr.
Detroit
Sharks still hunting
Have you seen the blatant reading
of the Detroit News and Free Press
by the talking heads of TV2’s morn
ing show? They now take time every
morning to openly peruse the loser
dailies - on the air! It reminds me of
the scene in “Jaws” where the bloat
ed, arrogant, fat cat mayor of the
town berates and threatens an elder
ly couple who left the water after
Jaws ate some townspeople. The
mayor wants the couple to act like it’s
safe, knowing all along that the killer
shark is still out there and hungry.
Is this where the Detroit Snooze
and Flea Press get their inflated cir
culation numbers?
I used to watch TV2’s morning
show, but as of yesterday I couldn’t
take it anymore. I now watch
Channel 4 and I will ask my friends
and neighbors to do the same.
You see, folks, no matter what smi
ley face tells you to get back in the
water, a smart person knows the
killer shark is still out there.
Susan Burke
Brown City
Look for union label
I can assure you that I will cancel
my subscription to the Sunday
Journal if the best that Shirley
Wilson can do is write about the con
doms that Danny Bonaduce was buy
ing in a store in Royal Oak. Surely, if
she tries, she can do better.
There is a lot of real news in
Detroit.
We are union people. Is Danny
Bonaduce? Hope so.
Dorris Casper
Madison Heights
Argument for merit pay
Michigan Gov. John Engler is the
second-highest paid governor in the
U.S. It is ironic that Engler, who has
worked so diligently to reduce com
pensation for working people,
receives such a high salary - with
perks, too.
Consistent with other Republicans,
Engler’s goal has been to redistribute
assets from the low and middle class
es to his wealthy patrons. Studies
show our state has become one of the
most regressive tax states, partially
through repeal of the intangibles tax
and the adoption of Proposal A.
Worker’s compensation and unem
ployment insurance have been
attacked and mental hospitals ruth
lessly closed. The infrastructure is in
dire straits, and the environment is
gravely compromised by Engler’s
pro-business, regardless-of-the-con-
sequences policies. Child immuniza
tion rates show Michigan near the
bottom of the national list. The qual
ity of life for the average Michigan
family under Engler’s so-called “fam
ily values party,” leaves much to be
desired.
To better his own political career,
Engler has cut sweetheart deals
with big business. State natural gas
resources are going at bargain base
ment prices. The governor would love
to give the green light to angle
drilling for gas and oil in our beauti
ful Lake Michigan. And big business
will pay less, even if the state’s citi
zens pay more, if electric utility rates
are deregulated.
Voters need to understand who is
really better off in Michigan because
of John Engler. Big business wins
while Engler rules. John Engler’s big
salary and perks are no bargain for
working people.
Bob Bird
Holland
Write us at the Journal
- The Detroit Sunday Journal welcomes
letters to the editor. They must be signed
with the author’s name, address and tele
phone number for verification but will be
published with author’s name and city
only. Send letters and opinion pieces to
The Detroit Sunday Journal, 450 W. Fort,
Detroit 48226.
Page 12 - [see page image]
PAGE 12
THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL
NOVEMBER 2, 1997
‘It was a sea of women’ at the march
Theresa Bullock, president of UAW
Local 2071, which represents clerical
and technical workers at Wayne State
University, attended the Million
Woman March last weekend in
Philadelphia. She went with a delega
tion of 10 women from her local. Here
is her account of that event.
By Theresa Bullock
I still get chills when I think
about the Million Woman March.
There was little media coverage,
and the fear was that the num
bers would be embarrassingly low.
But when we got to our hotel, women
were coming in by the busload.
Women were walking up to you in
the lobby, saying, “Sister, I am so glad
to see you.” I got the feeling that
everything was going to be OK. All
weekend whenever anyone started
being critical about something that
didn’t go right, we would join hands
and say we are not going to do that.
We pumped one another up.
It was raining and cold Saturday.
We got up at 5 a.m. and watched the
prayer vigil on TV. We saw women
standing with umbrellas in the rain
and we felt good. Watching them, we
knew the weather was not going to
stop us. We said we are here, we
have coats, gloves, umbrellas, rain
hats and gym shoes. We are going to
march, rain or shine. And then we
started walking.
It was awesome. All those women
in the rain. People were pushing
babies in strollers. There were grand
mothers. It was a sea of women and
the crowd kept getting bigger. The
rally was supposed to start at 9 a.m.,
but to me the march was the most
spiritual part of the day. All of these
women from all over the country
were coming together to show they
recognize the need for black sisters
to bond, to put aside their jealousies
and to say, “Sister, you are not alone.”
We locked arms and we sang songs
as we marched. The crowd was so
large that we couldn’t get near the
stage. Since the sound system wasn’t
sufficient, we couldn’t hear what was
being said. The women around me
joined hands; we made a commitment
to each other to treat our sisters bet
ter and to be better mothers. We
didn’t have to hear the words from
the stage to know why we were
there.
A fter three or four hours, my
/% group decided to get some-
/ % thing to eat. As we were
JL JL. walking away from the
rally, I stopped. Chills went all over
me. Women were still marching to
the rally. I thought I was in the
biggest crowd, but here was another
bigger crowd. You couldn’t see the
end of it.
We couldn’t tell how big the crowd
was, but if anyone tries to say a mil
lion women were not there, I can say
that’s not true. I think Detroit had
one of the largest delegations. A lot
of women didn’t register for the
march, they just got in their cars and
showed up. It was great.
Before we went to bed that night,
the 10 women in our group got
together and made a commitment
that we would not use so many harsh
words with one another. Then we
prayed together.
When we checked out the next
morning, the lobby was one big party.
Everyone was hugging and exchang
ing numbers and talking about start
ing an alumnae group. Sometimes
women need to talk to each other and
to listen without criticizing.
Our issues are different from men’s
issues. We always have had to be the
mama and the daddy; there wasn’t a
choice. We have always taken care of
the kids and gone out and worked.
The man’s calling is to be more in
touch with the family.
We have always been in touch with
our families; we need to be more in
touch with each other.
John White, UAW co-founder
John J. “Jack” White, 85, one of the
founders of the UAW, died Tuesday at
Bon Secours Hospital in Grosse Pointe.
Mr. White, who lived in Detroit, was
recording secretary of Local 174 - the
local that Walter Reuther served as
president — and retired from Team
sters Local 614 in Pontiac.
He was secretary-treasurer of the
state Teamsters Retirees Organiza
tion, president of the UAW Retirees
and the AFL-CIO Senior Retirees
Organization, board member of both
the National Council of Senior Citizens
and the Midwest Labor Institute, and
former board chairman of the
Detroit/Wayne County Area Agency on
Aging.
Survivors include his wife, Lois St.
Aubin White; two daughters, Nancy
Antisdel White and Catherine Lamar;
two brothers, Gerald and James; a
niece, Patricia Weaver, whom he
raised; six grandchildren; and five
great-grandchildren.,
A memorial and celebration of his
life is being planned for early
December.
Ike Krasner
fought for justice
Ike Krasner, 82, former Wayne State
professor known for his commitment to
social justice, died Monday.
Mr. Krasner taught in the Wayne
State University School of Social Work,
and after retirement founded the
Progressive Artists and Educators
Committee. He produced documen
taries on the Vietnam War protest and
racial equality and was among hun
dreds of people arrested for peaceful
civil disobedience on behalf of striking
Detroit newspaper workers.
Survivors include his wife, Fay;
obituaries
daughter, Beryl, and son-in-law, David
Bradley.
A memorial service will be planned.
Margaret Swift,
longtime, church activist
Margaret “Peggy” Swift, 62, died
Tuesday at Beverly Hills Nursing
Center, 16 months after being diag
nosed with Alzheimer’s disease. Mrs.
Swift moved to Detroit with her par
ents, the late Eugene and Inez
Betzold, when she was a young child.
In 1949 the family moved to St. Clair
Shores, where she lived until 1996.
She graduated in 1952 from St.
Gertrude High School and worked for
a time as a legal secretary. While on
her honeymoon in 1955, she learned of
her mother’s sudden death and
returned to her parents’ home, where
she helped raise her five younger
brothers and sisters. From 1982 to
1996, she worked as an office manager
at Born Center, an adult and special
education facility in St. Clair Shores.
She was active at St. Gertrude Church
and performed in numerous plays with
the St. Gertrude Players. She was
active in the Tiger Stadium Fan Club.
Survivors include her children,
Cindy Sause and Michael Swift; her
former husband, Jack; sisters Ann
Hauanio, Jane Benard and Patty
Betzold; brothers Eugene (Gary)
Betzold and Michael Betzold, a Guild
Local 22 member, and many nieces
and nephews. At press time her daugh
ter Cindy was in labor with Peggy’s
first grandchild. The funeral was
Saturday.
Journal photo by REBECCA COOK
Hitting the dirt
Members of the Farmington Hills youth baseball club took turns sliding into a cere
monial home plate Thursday after groundbreaking formalities for the new Tiger
Stadium in Detroit. The stadium is scheduled to open in the year 2000.
Page 13 - [see page image]
NOVEMBER 2, 1997
THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL
PAGE 13
DN blows kisses
to labor prof
D etroit News Publisher
Mark Silverman happily
quoted one of our
strongest supporters when
he spoke before Southfield’s Greater
Detroit Interfaith Round Table last
week. The program was “American
Arabic and Jewish Friends,” and
Silverman told the group he had a
wonderful article he wanted to read
about a Greek-American immi
grant. The News boss then read
from a story written by Steve
Babson, Wayne State University
labor studies professor, Detroit
labor author and outspoken anti-
Detroit Newspapers, prostrike sup
porter. Duuuh! It gave Professor
Babson a good laugh. Said he:
“Obviously someone in the News
library, to compensate for
Silverman’s complete ignorance of
Detroit, did a (computer) search and
came up with an article I wrote in
the 1986 Quarterly Review called
‘Living in Two Worlds: The
Immigrant Experience in Detroit.’
Silverman just read from the open
ing two or three paragraphs, which
focuses on a Greek immigrant
telling how strange it is to move
back and forth to Greece.” The
quick-witted Babson once made
mincemeat of DN labor V.P Tim
Kelleher on a public television
debate early in the strike, getting
Timmy so flustered he called
Babson “a radical ... group.” “A
group of one?” Babson snickered.
Gannett math
Gannett’s latest full-page cover ad
in Editor & Publisher claims that
71 percent of American adults read
a daily paper at least once a week.
The headline reads: “Seven out of
ten is impressive.” Perhaps, but the
self-promoting ad goes on to claim,
“Nationwide, nearly everyone reads
the daily newspaper.” What about
those other 29 percent of adults?
Maybe they don’t count.
Homeboy returns
Everclear’s concert Thursday at
St. Andrews Hall will be something
of a homecoming for front man Art
Alexakis, the singer-guitarist tells
BTL. “All my siblings were born in
either Detroit or Flint,” he relates.
Apparently the Alexakis family
lived in Michigan during the ’50s,
before Art’s birth. “I was conceived
in Michigan and born in California,”
explains Art. “So I grew up drinking
Vernor’s ginger ale, where no one
knew what the hell it was.”
Cameo appearance
In what has to be the shortest
tenure in Detroit radio history,
Ravenna Miceli did the morning
shows Monday and Tuesday on
Between
the Lines
By Shirley Wilson
and friends
Young Country (WYCD-FM) and
split. The parting was mutual,
birdies tell us. You’ll remember
Miceli was brought in by Young
Country radio to replace local leg
end Joe Wade Formicola, whose
contract was not renewed because
he supposedly didn’t appeal to
enough young women out there in
radioland. Apparently, Miceli didn’t
either. Stay tuned to see who turns
up next.
Get the good stuff in!
We were amused to see the
Detroit Scabfreep kiss off the eight
incumbents on Detroit City Council
by endorsing only two: Nicholas
Hood III and Alberta Tinsley-
Williams. Pointedly omitted was
Council President Maryann
Mahaffey, perhaps the most visible
political foe of the News’ and the
Free Press’ union-busting. The Free
Press accused the council of orneri
ness, insularity and delay.
Orneriness? Insularity? Delay?
Sounds like Gannett or Knight-
Ridder. In its endorsement story, the
Free Press admitted that voters
probably would ignore its views.
How sensible of them.
The sequined sports beat
We know you loved the Skate
America International competition
at Joe Louis last weekend as much
as our macho sports guys did ...
especially those beaded, sequined,
luxe fashions. The First-place duo of
Elizabeth Punsalan and Jerod
Swallow wore costumes designed
for them by none other than Donna
Karan. The Pontiac-based ice stars
will wear Karan’s costumes again in
the upcoming 1998 National Figure'
Skating Championship in
Minneapolis.
Scab rep is everywhere
Graduates of the prestigious
University of Missouri journalism
school are recruited by the nation’s
top newspapers. This year, as every
year, there’s a poster up at U-
Missouri’s journalism school listing
all the newspapers participating.
Somebody’s taken a pen to slash
through the Detroit Free Press’
name and write: “Union-busting
scab paper! Don’t go there!”
Get the good stuff into BTL! Fax
Shirley and the gang at 313-964-
5554 or E-mail 'em at
detjourn@aol. com.
A Public Sector state
employee Local Union,
fighting Engler for the
ability to continue pro
viding services to the citizens of
Michigan, UAW Local 6000 sup
ports the newspaper workers in
their struggle for justice.
URUJ
ximist, Mcknight, Sale,
McCLOW & Canzano, p.c.
Attorneys Representing |>imwh—
Labor Unions and Working People
We Support the Newspaper Workers
in Their Struggle
400 Galleria Officentre Suite 117
Southfield, Ml 48034, (248) 354-9650
LOCAL 12031
[UAWP
ADRIAN MICHIGAN
SUPPORTS STRIKING NEWSPAPER
WORKERS! SOLIDARITY FOREVER!
ON TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1997 ELECT BETTIE J.
COOK-SCOTT
TO THE DETROIT CITY COUNCIL
Police Officer • School Teacher • Community Activist
Experienced • Involved • Preferred & Well Qualified
Bettie J. COOK-SCOTT PUTS SPOTLIGHT ON “BACK TO BASICS”
Continuing her campaign theme of “BACK TO BASICS”, Bettie J. Cook-Scott today
announced a major push for programs to strengthen the family. Citing statistics that detail the decline of families in
Detroit, Cook-Scott “is determined to make a difference in the fight to get attention and respect for struggling fami
lies.” “There seems to be a program and money for every sociological ailment but none for families . . ” Yet, every
expert tells us that the decline in families are the root of most of society’s problems - delinquency, teen pregnancy,
single parent homes, divorce, alcoholism, drugs, etc.”
Cook-Scott proposes a maximum effort by Detroit social service agencies to have a summit on the family crisis
and develop a unified agenda to address these problems. Through the confluence of ideas and available funding, they
then could marshall an all-out assault on the many problems afflicting families.
From the point of the City’s ability to assist, every effort should be made to shore up family existence in Detroit,
from housing aid to tax relief, including tax cuts and tax abatement for residents as has been so generously given to
businesses. Extended residential services are a must - expanded trash pick-ups, both regular and bulk items, acceler
ated curb and sidewalk repairs to match expanded street repair and repaving. Also, a sweeping and cleaning of neigh
borhood streets should be a frequent event, not just reserved for the months just before elections...
“When I am elected to City Council,” said COOK-SCOTT, “it will be among my highest priorities to promote
causes, programs and laws that protect and preserve the welfare of families.” The City must step up to the plate and
become a power hitter in maintaining its very critical base of families. It simply cannot afford to let them get away.”
COOK-SCOTT suggests to the ministers and congregation of the area’s churches the implementation of “FAMI
LY SUNDAY” every 5th Sunday to enlist Detroit’s 2,000 houses of worship in this campaign, to save the families.
On each 5th Sunday, all activities would give families a day of togetherness, reflection, to recharge your spiritual bat
teries, including perhaps, an ordinance to cutback on business hours of liquor establishments and other intrusive busi
nesses on this one day, every month with a 5th Sunday. Contact: BETTY J. COOK-SCOTT (313) 881-8933
“Casino gambling is the only industry that exists solely because we, Detroiters lose, They win-we lose!”
Acronym: S.C.A.M. Stop Casino Advances in Motown.
We Support Team Pitoniak
The City of Taylor faces an important election on
Tuesday, November 4. Team Pitoniak has been a friend
to labor and labor urges you to support Team Pitoniak.
Team Pitoniak is endorsed by:
AFL-CIO • AFSCME • UAW
Teamsters • Steelworkers
Building and Construction
Trades and Council
Taylor Police Corporal-Patrol-
Cadet Association
Taylor City Employees
AFSCME Locals 1128 & 1917
Team Pitoniak Thanks You!
Mayor Gregory Pitoniak
City Clerk Dorothy West
Treasurer Candidate Jack Haydon
Councilman Ken Stewart
Councilwoman Jacklyn Molner
Council Candidate James Boardman
Councilman Dennis Stapleton
Councilman Rollie Hopgood
Councilwoman Pauline Ettore
Councilwoman Mary Ann Rilley
Vote Tuesday for Team Pitoniak
Paid for by The Pitoniak Team, P.O. Box 1059, Taylor, MI 48180
Page 14 - [see page image]
PAGE 14
THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL
NOVEMBER 2, 1997
Call theaters for show times, prices and updated listings.
Wayne County
Allen Park (MJR)
Allen Road at Southfield Rd.
(313) 381-1125
Wishmaster * The Edge * Cop Land *
Conspiracy Theory * Hercules * Spawn *
Good Burger
Beacon East
(Showcase)
Vernier (Eight Mile) at Beaconsfield
(313) 882-7500
Men in Black * L.A. Confidential * Air
Force One * Devil’s Advocate
Bel-Air (AMC)
Eight Mile Rd., east of Van Dyke
(313) 366-0800
Gattaca * Soul Food * Most Wanted * Air
Force One * Men in Black *
Devil’sAdvocate * Red Corner * I Know
What You Did Last Summer * Kiss the
Girls * Switchback * Gang Related
Canton (General Cinema)
Ford Rd. 1 mile west of 1-275
(313) 981-1900
Switchback * I Know What You Did Last
Summer * Kiss the Girls * Boogie Nights *
Seven Years in Tibet * In and Out * A Life
Less Ordinary
Detroit Film Theatre
Detroit Institute of Arts, 5200 Woodward
(313) 833-2323
(Sunday) M (restored) * (Monday) To
Speak the Unspeakable: The Message of
Elie Wiesel * (Friday/Saturday) Diary of a
Seducer
Detroit Science Center
Warren, east of Woodward, Detroit
(313) 577-8400
Destiny in Space * Special Effects * Super
Speedway: Racing With the Andrettis
Eastland Mall 2 (AMC)
Vernier (Eight Mile) at Beaconsfield
(313) 882-4648
Gang Related * Soul Food
Eastland Mall 5 (AMC)
Vernier (Eight Mile) at Beaconsfield
(313) 521-2811
Kiss the Girls * I Know What You Did Last
Summer * Switchback * Gattaca * Boogie
Nights
Fairlane (U.A.)
Fairlane Town Center, Dearborn
(313) 438-0929
Switchback * Playing on Two Screens *
Red Corner * A Life Less Ordinary *
Grizzly Mountain * Gattaca * Fairy Tale *
Soul Food * Kiss the Girls * In and Out *
Air Force One * Meh in Black
Ford-Tel
Ford Rd. at Telegraph Rd., Dearborn
(313) 561-7200
Cop Land * Good Burger * The Edge
Laurel Park (AMC)
Six Mile Rd., bet. Newburgh and 1-275
(313) 462-6200
Boogie Nights * Switchback * Red Corner
* I Know What You Did Last Summer * A
Life Less Ordinary * Devil’s Advocate * In
and Out * L.A. Confidential * The
Peacemaker * Kiss the Girls * Rocket Man
* Seven Years in Tibet
Livonia Mall (MJR)
Middle Belt Rd. at Seven Mile Rd.
(313) 476-8800
Hercules * Good Burger * Conspiracy
Theory * The Edge * Wishmaster
Metro Norwest
Grand River at Southfield Freeway
(313) 838-1030
I Know What You Did Last Summer' Soul
Food * Most Wanted
Penn
Penniman at Main, Plymouth
(313) 453-0870
The Edge
Quo Vadis
(Showcase)
Wayne Rd. at Warren Ave., Westland
(313) 425-7700
Switchback * Gattaca * Soul Food * I
Know What You Did Last Summer *
• Rocket Man * Seven Years in Tibet
Renaissance Center
Tower 200, Level 2 of Renaissance Cntr.
(313) 259-2370
Devil’s Advocate * Soul Food * Gang
Related * Most Wanted * I Know What You
Did Last Summer
Showcase Dearborn
Michigan Ave. west of Telegraph Rd.
(313) 561-3449
Boogie Nights * Devil’s Advocate * I Know
What You Did Last Summer * Seven Years
in Tibet * Rocket Man * Most Wanted *
Gang Related
Showcase Westland
Wayne Rd. a block south of Warren Rd.
(313) 729-1060
Fairy Tale * Boogie Nights * Devil’s
Advocate * In and Out * Red Corner *
Grizzly Mountain * Kiss the Girls
Southland (AMC)
Eureka Rd., bet. 1-75 and Telegraph Rd.
(313) 287-2101
Devil’s Advocate * I Know What You Did
Last Summer * A Life Less Ordinary * Air
Force One * Men in Black
Star Lincoln Park
Southfield Rd. at Dix Rd.,
(313) 382-2114
Switchback ' Red Corner * I Know What
You Did Last Summer * Devil’s Advocate *
Soul Food * Kiss the Girls * Most Wanted
Star Taylor
22265 Eureka Road
(313) 287-2200
Red Corner * Switchback * Boogie Nights
* Gattaca * Fairy Tale * Seven Years in
Tibet * Kiss the Girls * Peacemaker * In
and Out * Rocketman * L.A. Confidential
State Wayne
35310 Michigan Ave. west of Wayne
(313) 326-4600
Good Burger * The Edge * Hercules *
Wishmaster * Conspiracy Theory * Cop
Land
Terrace (Cinemark)
Plymouth Rd. west of Middle Belt Rd.
(313) 261-3330
Conspiracy Theory * Wishmaster * Cop
Land * A Smile Like Yours
Wonderland (AMC)
Plymouth Rd. at Middle Belt Rd.
(313) 261-8100
Red Corner * Devil’s Advocate * The
Peacemaker * Soul Food * Rocket Man *
Gattaca * Fairy Tale: A True Story
Wyandotte
102 Elm St., Wyandotte
(313) 283-8844
The Peacemaker* The Full Monty
Oakland County
Abbey (AMC)
14 Mile Rd. east of 1-75
(248) 588-0881
Red Corner * Switchback * A Life Less
Ordinary * I Know What You Did Last
Summer * A Thousand Acres * Rocket
Man * The Full Monty * L.A. Confidential
Americana West (AMC)
Orchard Lake Road, south of 15 Mile
(248) 855-4200
Red Corner * Switchback * Gattaca * Fairy
Tale: A True Story * I Know What You Did
Last Summer * Kiss the Girls
Birmingham Theatre
211 S. Woodward, Birmingham
(248) 644-3456
Red Corner * A Life Less Ordinary * The
Devil’s Advocate * I Know What You Did
Last Summer * Seven Years in Tibet * Kiss
the Girls * In and Out * L.A. Confidential
Farmington Civic
Grand River at Farmington Rd.,
Farmington
(248) 474-1951
Conspiracy Theory * The Edge
Hampton (AMC)
Rochester Rd., a mile north of M-59
(248) 852-5322
Hercules * My Best Friend’s Wedding *
Conspiracy Theory * The Edge
Keego Twin
Orchard Lake Rd. at Cass Lake Rd.
(248) 682-1900
The Edge* Conspiracy Theory
Main Art (Landmark)
Main at 11 Mile Road, Royal Oak
(248) 542-0180
The Full Monty * Fast, Cheap and Out of
Control * Washington Square
Maple (AMC)
Maple Rd., west of Telegraph Rd.
(248) 855-9090
The Full Monty * Boogie Nights * The
House Of Yes
Novi Town Center
(General Cinema)
Novi Rd., south of 1-96
(248) 344-0077
Boogie Nights * Red Corner * Men in
Black * Peacemaker * Gattaca * The Full
Monty * L.A. Confidential * Air Force One *
Seven Years in Tibet * Devil’s Advocate
Oakland Mall (U.A.)
14 Mile Rd. between 1-75 and John R
(248) 988-0706
Mern in Black * Grizzly Mountain * Men in
Black * Switchback * Gattaca * Fairy Tale *
Playing God * Soul Food * Air Force One *
A Life Less Ordinary * Kiss the Girls * In
and Out * Rocket Man * I Know What You
Did Last Summer
Old Orchard (AMC)
Orchard Lake Road, north of 12 Mile
(248) 553-9965
Devil’s Advocate * Seven Years in Tibet *
L.A. Confidential
Oxford
Lapeer Rd., downtown Oxford
(248) 628-7100
Warriors of Virture * Red Corner * Men in
Black * Air Force One * I Know What You
Did Last Summer
Showcase Auburn Hills
Opdyke bet. University and Lapeer
(248) 373-2660
Boogie Nights * Red Corner * Switchback
* Grizzly Mountain * Fairy Tale * Gattaca *
Devil’s Advocate * I Know What You Did
Last Summer * Rocket Man * Seven Years
in Tibet * Kiss the Girls * In and Out
Showcase Pontiac (1-5)
Telegraph Rd at Square Lake Rd.
(248) 332-0241
Boogie Nights * Fairy Tale * Devil’s
Advocate * Seven Years in Tibet
Showcase Pontiac (6-12)
Telegraph Rd. at Square Lake Rd.
(248) 334-6777
Switchback * Red Corner * Grizzly
Mountain * Gattaca * Kiss the Girls * L.A.
Confidential * I Know What You Did Last
Summer * In and Out
Southfield City (AMC)
Greenfield Rd. at Nine Mile Rd.
(248) 559-2730
Switchback * Red Corner * Soul Food *
Men in Black * Air Force One * Know
What You Did Last Summer * The Devil’s
Advocate * Kiss the Girls * Playing God *
Rocket Man * Gattaca * Most Wanted
Star John R
John R, so. of 14 Mile Rd., Madison Hts.
(248) 585-2070
Boogie Nights * Devil’s Advocate * Kiss
the Girls * Seven Years in Tibet * The
Game * In and Out * The Peacemaker
Star Rochester Hills
200 Barclay Circle, Rochester Rd. n. of M59
(248) 853-2260
Switchback * Red Corner * Boogie Nights
* The Peacemaker * In and Out * Kiss the
Girls * Seven Years in Tibet * L.A.
Confidential * Devil’s Advocate * I Know
What You Did Last Summer
Star Southfield
12 Mile Rd. west of Telegraph
(248) 372-2222
Ice Storm * Switchback * Red Corner *
Grizzly Mountain * Boogie Nights * Boogie
Nights * Fairy Tale * Gattaca * Devil’s
Advocate * I Know What You Did Last
Summer * In and Out *L.A. Confidential *
Kiss the Girls * Rocket Man * Seven Years
in Tibet * Soul Food * Peacemaker
Star Winchester
1136 South Rochester Rd.
(248) 656-1160
Grizzly Mountain * Fairy Tale * Gattaca * A
Life Less Ordinary * Playing God * Rocket
Man * The Full Monty
Towne (AMC)
Greenfield, just north of 10 1/2 Mile
(248) 968-5174
Spawn * Good Burger * How to be a
Player * Wishmaster * The Edge
Twelve Oaks (U.A.)
Inside Twelve Oaks Mall, Novi
(248) 349-4311
Switchback * IKnow What You Did Last
Summer * A Life Less Ordinary * In and
Out * Kiss the Girls * Rocket Man
Waterford (MJR)
M-59 at Williams Lake Road
(248) 666-7900
Switchback * Grizzly Mountain * Red
Corner * Boogie Nights * Fairy Tale *
Gattaca * Devil’s Advocate * Peacemaker
* A Life Less Ordinary * I Know What You
Did Last Summer * Rocket Man * Kiss the
Girls * Seven Years in Tibet
West River (U.A.)
Grand River, west of Middlebelt Road
(248) 476-8844
Boogie Nights * Red Corner * Fairy Tale *
A Life Less Ordinary * Devil’s Advocate *
Kiss the Girls * L.A. Confidential * In and
Out * Soul Food * Know What You Did
Last Summer
Macomb County
Chesterfield Crossing (MJR)
23 Mile Rd. at Gratiot, Chesterfield
(810) 598-2500
Boogie Nights * Red Corner * Switchback
* Fairy Tale * Gattaca * A Life Less
Ordinary * The Edge * In and Out * The
Peacemaker * Kiss the Girls * Rocket Man
* Seven Years in Tibet * Devil’s Advocate *
I Know What You Did Last Summer
Romeo
Van Dyke at 30 1/2 Mile Rd., Washington
(810) 752-3455
I Know What You Did Last Summer *
Rocket Man
Shores
Mack so. of 9 Mile Rd., St. Clair Shores
(810) 775-6800
Conspiracy Theory * Cop Land
Showcase Sterling
Van Dyke at 15 Mile Road
(810) 979-3160
Boogie Nights * Switchback * Red Corner
* Grizzly Mountain * Fairy Tale * Soul
Food * Gattaca * Devil’s Advocate * I
Know What You Did Last Summer * Seven
Years in Tibet * Rocket Man * Kiss the
Girls * The Peacemaker * In and Out
Star Gratiot
Gratiot, north of 15 Mile Rd.,
Clinton Township
(810)791-3420
Red Corner * Switchback * Devil’s
Advocate * A Life Less Ordinary * Boogie
Nights'* Gattaca * Fairy Tale * I Know
What You Did Last Summer * In and Out *
The Peacemaker * Kiss the Girls * Rocket
Man
Sterling Center (AMC)
Schoenherr Rd. south of Hall Rd.
(810) 254-7400
Switchback * Red Corner * Boogie Nights
* In and Out * Seven Years in Tibet *
Devil’s Advocate * I Know What You Did
Last Summer * Kiss the Girls * The
Peacemaker * Gattaca * A Life Less
Ordinary
Warren (Cinemark)
Dequindre south of 12 Mile Rd., Warren
(810) 558-7520
Wishmaster * The Edge * Event Horizon *
A Smile Like Yours * Cop Land * Good
Burger * Fire Down Below * Nothing to
Lose * Mimic * Spawn * Leave it to Beaver
* Liar, Liar * My Best Friend’s Wedding *
Contact * Hercules * Con Air * Face/Off *
Conspiracy Theory * Def Jam’s How to be
a Player
Washtenaw County
Briarwood (U.A.)
Inside the Briarwood Mall, Ann Arbor
(313) 480-4555
Red Corner * Devil’s Advocate * A Life
Less Ordinary * Seven Years in Tibet * I
Know What You Did Last Summer * Kiss
the Girls * In and Out
Pox Village Theatre (MJR)
Jackson at Maple, Ann Arbor
(313) 994-8080
Conspiracy Theory 'The Game * The
Edge * Cop Land * Hercules
Showcase Ann Arbor
Carpenter Rd., north, of 1-94, e. of US 23
(313) 973-8380
Switchback * Red Corner * Gattaca *
Devil’s Advocate * I Know What You Did
Last Summer * Playing God * Seven
Years in Tibet * Rocket Man * Kiss the
Girls * Soul Food * In and Out * L.A.
Confidential
Livingston County
Brighton (MJR)
1-96 exit at Grand River, Brighton
(810) 227-4700
Red Corner * Switchback * Fairy Tale *
Gattaca * Devil’s Advocate * I Know What
You Did Last Summer * The Edge * Kiss
the Girls * Rocket Man * Seven Years in
Tibet
Page 15 - [see page image]
NOVEMBER 2, 1997
Super Sunday: Fantasy,
Fletcher and football
W hile we marveled at Game 7 of the World Series (which I’m con
vinced was extended to seven games as a kind of cosmic slap in the
puss to NBC big dome Don Ohlmeyer, who got to boast all year
about his network having the Series, then publicly prayed for a
sweep so the games wouldn’t damage his precious “Must-See TV” ratings) the
November ratings sweeps war practically sneaked up on us. And the networks
apparently decided to make this Sunday the major battleground for the skir
mish, pitting Oprah, Jessica Fletcher, a ’90s Frankenstein, a Brandy-flavored
“Cinderella,” the Lions and the return of “The X-Files” against each other, with
your eyes as the prize.
■ “Cinderella,”
2 today, ABC
(Channel 7 in
Detroit) - The
most positive
side effect from
Channel 7 decid
ing to carry
ESPN’s broadcast of the Lions-
Packers game Sunday night is that it
will make Detroit the First city in
America to witness Disney’s
sparkling new $12 million production
of the Rogers & Hammerstein TV
classic. Through a special arrange
ment with ABC, “Cinderella” will air
Sunday afternoon here, but 8 p.m.
EST everywhere else. This multicul
tural “Wiz”-like version of the musi
cal holds power at any hour, with pop
diva Whitney Houston (who original
ly helped develop the concept for
CBS, but was dropped by that net
work after four years of futility) as
the Queen, teen superstar Brandy
Norwood (“Moesha”) in the title role
and an all-star supporting cast
including Whoopi Goldberg,
Bernadette Peters and Jason
Alexander of “Seinfeld” in the new
role of valet to the Prince (played by
newcomer Paolo Montalban). The
modernized, politically correct ’90s
script also contains additional
Rodgers tunes to augment the origi
nal 1957 score.
■ “Eastwood on Eastwood,” 7
tonight (repeated at 11 tonight, 12:30
a.m. Sunday and 11 p.m. Thursday),
TNT - Do you feel lucky tonight?
Well, do you, punk? You should feel
quite blessed if you’re a Clint
Eastwood fan with cable, thus able to
drink in this rich and surprisingly
revealing retrospective of the actor-
director’s long career. Filled with
clips, narrated by John Cusack and
featuring Eastwood’s own insights
from the Savannah set of his upcom
ing movie “Midnight in the Garden of
Good and Evil,” the 90-minute profile
is based on the Richard Schickel book
“Clint Eastwood: A Biography.” It
Jim
McFarlin
Highlights
captures Clint
from his 1960s
TV days as
Rowdy Yates on
“Rawhide”
through the
spaghetti west
erns, the “Dirty
Harry” era and his Oscar-winning
work on “Unforgiven.” TNT follows
the 12:30 a.m. Monday airing with
Eastwood’s 1975 Film “The Eiger
Sanction” at 2 a.m.
■ NFL: Detroit Lions at Green
Bay Packers, 8 tonight, Channel 7
(ESPN nationally) - The Sunday
night NFL game has made its annual
switch from TNT to ESPN at midsea
son, which is about the same time the
Lions make their annual drive to
become a winning team. Coming off a
bye week and an overtime loss to the
Giants, this should logically be
Detroit’s week to win. But the Pack
has already lost to the Lions once
this season, 26-15 in September, and
the Super Bowl champs don’t take
such indignities lightly. Mike Patrick
and Joe Theismann call the game
from the land of Cheeseheads.
■ “House of Frankenstein 1997,” 9
tonight and 9 p.m. Monday, NBC
(Channel 4 in Detroit) - This $14
million Halloween weekend frightfest
UPN
Brandy Norwood is Cinderella in a new ver
sion of the classic at 2 p.m. today on
Channel 7.
totally defies belief: Not because the
Frankenstein monster, a master vam
pire and a sexy blond werewolf could
terrorize Los Angeles in 1997, but
because anyone there would even
take notice of them on LA streets.
The four-hour mini-series stars
Adrian Pasdar (“Profit”) as a homi
cide detective whose investigation
into a string of grisly murders leads
him to a trendy gothic nightclub
called House of Frankenstein (like
House of Blues, but with uglier per
formers) and its mysterious owner.
■ “The X-Files,” 9 tonight, Fox
(Channel 2 in Detroit) - When last
we left agent Fox Mulder (David
Duchovny), he was dead. At least,
that’s what we were led to believe, as
his partner Dana Scully (Gillian
Anderson) announced that the ever-
questioning one had taken his own
JIMMY MACK’S MAGNIFICENT MOVIE MENU
“Planet of the Apes,” noon
today, Cinemax; “What’s Eating
Gilbert Grape?” 8 tonight,
Cinemax; “Old Yeller,” 10
tonight, Disney Channel; “The
Lion in Winter,” 7:35 a.m. and
6:40 p.m. Monday, Movie Channel;
“Seven Angry Men,” 3 p.m.
Monday, History Channel; “The
Great Escape,” midnight
Tuesday, TNT; “The French
Connection,” 12:40 a.m.
Tuesday, Movie Channel;
“Tucker: The Man and His
Dream,” 2 p.m. Tuesday, USA;
“All the President’s Men,” 8
p.m. Tuesday, Family Channel;
“Somewhere in Time,” 10:05
p.m. Tuesday, Disney Channel;
“Broadcast News,” 1 p.m.
Wednesday and 2 a.m. Thursday,
USA; “They Shoot Horses,
Don’t They?” 8 p.m. Wednesday,
Cinemax; “Casablanca,” 9 p.m.
Friday and 1 a.m. Saturday,
Channel 56; “Close Encounters
of the Third Kind,” midnight
Saturday, Disney Channel.
Fox
Agent Scully (Gillian Anderson) takes a
turn for the worse in the season premiere
of “The X-Files” at 9 tonight on Fox.
life. But if there’s one thing you
should know by now, it’s that season-
ending cliff-hangers are seldom what
they seem. The Fifth season of “The
X- Files” begins with a two-part story
arc in which a very live and lively
Mulder seeks to prove his FBI supe
riors had something to do with inject
ing the cancer that’s ravaging
Scully’s body - while she begins to
take a turn for the worse.
■ “Murder, She Wrote: South by
Southwest,” 9 tonight, CBS
(Channel 62 in Detroit) - “North by
Northwest,” it’s not. But it is the tem
porary return of Angela Lansbury to
CBS on Sunday nights, in the First of
a sweeps-time series of made-for-TV
movies starring that Cabot Cove
crime buster, Jessica Fletcher. This
time, the mystery unfolds on a slow
train to El Paso, where Jessica meets
a woman (Mel Harris of “Something
So Right”) who’s obviously running
scared even though she’s under feder
al protection for witnessing a murder.
When she disappears, Jessica’s
search for clues takes her to a remote
and menacing Arizona village.
■ “Before Women Had Wings,”
11:30 p.m. Sunday, Channel 7 - Is
Oprah Winfrey a good actor? That’s
up to you to decide. But she didn’t get
to be the richest woman in television
by being a fool: She’s always smart
enough to enlist a truly outstanding
thespian — in this case, Ellen Barkin
- to elevate her own performance.
Here the Big O is the neighbor to a
See McFARLIN, Page 24
Page 16 - [see page image]
SUNDAY MORNING/AFTERNOON
NOVEMBER 2, 1997
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
BROADCAST CHANNELS
FOX
Q
Eyewitness Weekend
Fox News Sunday
Replay
Football
Fox NFL Sunday!
NFL Football: Washington Redskins at Chicago Bears. (In Stereo Live) ®
NFL Football ®
Lighter Side | Emergency
NBC
News
[Today (In Stereo) 333
News iHomeBlth
Meet the Press!
NFL on NBC!
NFL Football: Regional Coverage
ABC
(7:30) News
Good Morning America [Healthy"
Matlock “P.l.” (In Stereo)
Siskel
This Week ®
Spotlight
Entertainment Tonight ® |Movie: "Cinderella"(1997, Musical) Whitney Houston.
PGA Golf !S
CBC
Cottage
Gardener
Coronation Street (R)
Riverdale [
Riverdale [
50 UpSE
Alive! as
CFL Football: Division Semifinal -- Teams to Be Announced. (Live) 3E
CFL Football (Live)!
WB
©
J.Kennedy
Children
Victory
Oscar’s
Mask
Ghostbstrs
All Dogs Go
Zorro BE
Masters
BoyWorld
Movie: ★* 1 /2 “Taking Care of Business" (1990)
Medicine Woman
Baywatch (In Slereo) BS
UPN
SD
Monkeys
Dinosaurs
Beast Wars [Algo
Jumanji [
Hulk
Breaker
Sw. Valley
Movie
Movie
Movie
PBS
©
Daedal
Reppies BS
Sesame Street (In Stereo)
AutoLine
Editors
Contrary
Financial
Business
Religion
McLaughlin
Off Rec'rd
To Be Announced
Mike Hammer Private Eye[Pensacola-Wing
Russia’s War [
CBS
©
Executive
WallSt
Sunday Morning BE
Face Nation
Hard Copy
Nick Saban
Outdoors
Paid Prog.
Designing
Designing
** ‘‘Chance of a Lifetime"
CABLE CHANNELS
A&E
(7:00) Movie: “NightTrain"
Breakfast With the Arts
| Open Book
Biography International: Mahatma Gandhi: Pilgrim
Movie: *★★’/2 "The Nun’s Story" (1959, Drama)
Biography This Week (R) |Sea Tales (R)
AMC
(7:15) Movie
*★ "Mark of the Gorilla"
Movie: “Blondie Brings Up Baby" (1940)
Movie: "The Thief of Bagdad” (1940)
Movie: ★* “Tarzan and the Mermaids"
Movie: "Laura" (1944, Mystery)
Movie: "Rome Adventure" (1962) |
BET
Brkthrgh
Blessing
Bobby Jones Gospel
Gospel
Lead Story
Our Voices
Business
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DISC
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Zooventure
Boneheads
Jaws-Claws
No, Really!
Movie
PopSci (R)
Invention
News
Real ER (R)
Traitors (R)
Wolves at Our Door (R)
High Speed Chase (R) j
ESPN
ESPNews
ESPNews
NFL
Sportsweekh
1
Reporters
Sportsctr.
NFL Countdown
Yachting
Equestrian: National Horse Show.
Tennis: ATP Paris Open Indoor Championship -- Final.
FAM
In Touch BE
Animal
Animal
| Before They Were Stars
Christy “The Sweetest Gift” (In Stereo) BE
Movie: ★* "Babies" (1990, Drama) Lindsay Wagner. ]
Movie: ★★ “In the Eyes of a Stranger" (1992)
FSD
Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
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Red Wings
TBA
NBA Action
Horseworld (R)
NPSL Soccer: Edmonton Drillers at Detroit Rockers.
Futbol
|Red Wings
NHL Hockey: Mighty Ducks at Red Wings
LIFE
Paid Prog.
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Baby
Kids These
Golden
Golden
Movie: "The Hired Heart" (1997) Penelope Ann Miller.
Movie: ** “In a Stranger's
/-/and” (1991) Robert Urich.
“When the Bough Breaks" |
NICK
Muppets
Tiny Toon
Looney Tunes
Rugrats BE
Beavers
Hey Arnold!
Monsters
Rocko
My Brother
Pete & Pete
SpaceCase
You Do
[Crazy Kids
[Gadget
| Salute
Temple |Pete & Pete |
SCIFI
Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
Sci-Fi Buzz
In Space
Anti-Gravity
Starship
Alien Nation (In Stereo) BE
Web
New Edge
CNet
Sightings (In Stereo) BE
|Movie: ★* “Star Quest"(1995) Alan Rachins. BE
TBS
Scooby Doo
Flintstones
Flintstones
Police Academy
Movie: *★* “Dece/Vecf” (1991) Goldie Hawn.
Movie: ★★V2
“A Death in California" (1985, Drama) Cheryl Ladd, Sam Elliott.
| Hillbillies
TLC
Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
SchoolStor
MenTlblts
| Renovation
HomeSvy
Hometime
| Hometime
[Home Again
Home Again |Cyberspace
| Cyberspace
| Cyberspace
| Cybersecrecy (R)
TNT
Taz-Mania
Scooby Dooby Doo
Gilligan
In the Heat of the Night
In the Heat of the Night
Movie: ★★'/2 "Tightrope" (19M, Suspense) Clint Eastwood.
|Movie: *** “A Fistful of Dollars" (1964, Western) \“Hang-High"\
USA
Wing Cmdr.
Dragon
MortalK
Fighter
Saved-Bell
| USA High
WWF Superstars
Movie: -k-k'/i "Pet Sematary" (1989) Dale Midkiff. BE
Movie: ** “Pet Sematary Two"( 1992, Horror) BE
[Movie: ** “Child’s Play2"\
DISN
Pooh
Mermaid
Amazing
Amazing
"An American Tail: Fievel Goes West"‘G’
[Good, Bad and Huckleberry Hound
Sitters
| Flash
|Torkelsons
[inside Out
|P. Bunyan
| Movie: "Brothers of the Frontier" (1996) |
HBO
Movie: ★**
"Lucas"(1986) Corey Haim.
‘PG-13’ BE
Movie: “The Undercover Kid" (1996)
Joe DiMaggio
|Movie: 2 "Hope and Glory" (1987) Sarah Miles.
|Movie: *★ “One Crazy Summer"(1986)
|*** “Independence Day" \
MAX
Movie: ★★★Vi "Things Change"(1988)
|Movie: ★★★V2 “The Hunt for Red October" (1990) Sean Connery. BE |Movie: “Planet of the Apes" (1968) ‘G’
|Movie: “Murder In Mississippi" (1990)
|Movie:** “Steal Big, Steal Little" (1995) |
SHO
Stories
|Tales
|Treas Isle
My Life-Dog | Movie: *★ "Ruby Jean and Joe" (1996) | Movie: ★★'/2 “Hard Country" (1981, Drama) ‘PG’
| Movie: “The Baby-Sitters Club" (1995)
| Movie: "Rescuers: Stories of Courage - Two Women" \
TMC
(7:20) Movie:
"Babes"
|Movie: *★ “No Holds Barred" (1989) BE |Movie: “A Walk With Love and Death"
|Movie: *** “Land and Freedom" (1995) Ian Hart. ‘NR’ |Movie: ** “Perfect" {1985, Drama) John Travolta. ‘R’
|Movie: "Our Man Flint"
I SUNDAY EVENING
NOVEMBER 2,1997
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 |
O
FOX
(4:00) NFL Football: Dallas Cowboys at San Francisco
49ers. From 3Com Park. (In StereoLive) BE
World’s Funniest! (In
Stereo) BE
Simpsons
(In Stereo)
King of the
Hill BE
X-Files “Redux" BE
News
Sports Zone
X-Files “Squeeze” (In
Stereo) BE
Highlander: The Series
"Patient Number 7"
Psi-Factor: Chronicles of
the Paranormal S
O
NBC
Looking Beyond
News
NBC Nightly
News BE
Dateline (In Stereo) BE
Men Behav-
Bad
Jenny (In
Stereo) BE
Movie: “House of Frankenstein 1997"(1997) Vampires
and werewolves are on the prowl in modern-day L.A. ®
News
Sports Final
Edition
Locker
Room
Dumb
Criminal
Paid
Program
Paid
Program
O
ABC
PGA Golf: TOUR
Championship
News
ABC Wld
News
Lions Prime Time
NFL Football: Detroit Lions at Green Bay Packers. From Lambeau Field. (Live) BE I
News
Movie: “Before Women Had Wings"
(1997, Drama) Oprah Winfrey. BE
Inside
Edition
Texas
Ranger
O
CBC
(4:00) CFL Football: Division Semifinal -- Teams to Be
Announced. (Live) BE
To Be Announced
Wind at My Back “The
Champ" BE
Life and Times "The
Roots Boys" BE
Sunday
Report BE
CFL Football: Division Semifinal -- Teams to Be Announced. (R) BE |
©
WB
Hercules: The Legendary
Journeys (In Stereo) BE
Xena: Warrior Princess
“Gabrielle's Hope" BE
NickFreno: I Parent
Teacher ’Hood BE
Jamie Foxx
(In Stereo)
[Tom (In
Stereo) BE
Unhappily
Ever After
Alright
Already BE
Earth: Final Conflict
“Avatar” (In Stereo)
Jack Van
Impe
Highway
Patrol
Highway
Patrol
Save Our
Streets
Movie: ** “Surrender"
1(1987) Sally Field. !
©
UPN
(4:00) Movie
Wild Things (In Stereo) BE
To Be Announced
Frasier (In
Stereo) BE
News BE
Sports Xtra I
Roc (In
Stereo) BE
Transition
Straight
Talk
Kenneth Copeland (In
[stereo)
Jack Van
Impe
©
PBS
(4:00) Russia’s War (In
Stereo) (Part 5 of 5) BE
National Geographic on
Assignment
All Creatures Great and
Small
Nature “Incredible
Suckers" (R) (In Stereo) BE
Masterpiece Theatre “The Moonstone” A priceless
diamond is stolen from a sacred Indian shrine. BE
In the Life “Back to School
- Youth and Education”
Masterpiece Theatre “The Moonstone" A priceless
diamond is stolen from a sacred Indian shrine. SI
©
CBS
(4:00) Movie: ★* “Chance
of a Lifetime" 11991)
CBS News
I In Depth
Detroit
60 Minutes (In Stereo) BE
Touched by an Angel
“Sandcastles” (In Stereo)
Movie: “Murder, She Wrote: South by Southwest"
(1997, Mystery) Angela Lansbury, Mel Harris. BE
Seinfeld (In I
Stereo) BE
[Mad About
You BE
In Depth
Detroit
NYPD Blue “Emission
[Accomplished” (In Stereo) |
Sports
Machine
CABLE CHANNELS
A&E
New Explorers
Home Again
(R)
Home Again
(R)
Ancient Mysteries
"Reincarnation”
Greatest Pharaohs Lives of the first rulers of ancient
Egypt are chronicled with visits to historical sites. (R) BE
Greatest Pharaohs Amenhotep’s and Queen Nefertiti's
ascensions to the throne. (R) (Pari 2 of 2) ®
Greatest Pharaohs Lives of the first rulers of ancient
Egypt are chronicled with visits to historical sites. (R) BE
AMC
(3:30) Movie
Hollywood
Diaries (R)
Movie: ★V2 “The Deerslayer"( 1957,
Adventure) Lex Barker, Rita Moreno.
Behind the
Screen BE
Movie: “Portrait in Black” (1960) Lana Turner. A
bedridden tycoon is marked for murder by his wife. BE
Movie: *** “The Crimson Pirate" (1952,
Adventure) Burt Lancaster. BE
Movie: *** "Rome Adventure" (1962) Troy Donahue.
An American woman goes to Italy to learn about love. |
Hollywood 1
Diaries (R) 1
BET
Paid Prog.
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DISC
Runaway Trains (R)
Mysterious
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Fangs! “Company of
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Wild Discovery “Great
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Inside Area 51
Phoenix
Justice Files “Something
Snapped”(R)
Wild Discovery “Great
Siberian Grizzly" (R)
Inside Area 51 (R)
ESPN
Triathlon: Ironman
Switzerland.
Superbouts: Leonard vs.
Hearns
NFL Primetime
NFL Football: Detroit Lions at Green Bay Packers. From Lambeau Field. (Live) BE I
NFL Sportscenter ®
jNFL Primetime (R)
NFL’s
Greatest
FAM
Movie: ★* “Mother Teresa: In the Name of God's
Poor” (1997, Drama) Geraldine Chaplin. (In Stereo) BE
Movie: *V!2 “Night Visitors" (1996) Faith Ford. A
graduate student uncovers a bizarre military cover-up.
Carson’s 22nd Anniversary Johnny Carson celebrates
his 22nd year with “The Tonight Show."
Hawaii Five-0 “Full
Fathom Five" ®
John
Osteen BE
Larry Jones |
Paid
Program
Paid
Program
FSD
NHL Hockey
[RedWings [NHL Shots
ABL Basketball: Blizzard at Rage
To Be Announced
FOX Sports News
FOX Sports News
[NHL Hockey: Mighty Ducks at Red Wings
LIFE
(4:00) Movie: ** "When
the Bough Breaks" (1993)
Movie: "MixedBlessings" (1995, Drama) Three
couples face the pressures of first-time parenthood.
[Movie: “With Harmful Intent” (1993) Joan Van Ark. A
madman may be stalking a small town’s children.
Intimate Portrait “Jackie
Onassis” (R) (In Stereo) BE
Homicide: Life on the
Street (In Stereo) ®
One West Waikiki
[“Vanishing Act" (In Stereo) |
Paid
Program
Paid
Program
NICK
Clarissa
Explains
[Tiny Toon
Adventures
Figure It
Out
[Rocko’s
Modern Life
My Brother
and Me (R)
All That (R)
(In Stereo)
Shelby Woo
[Nick News ]
®
Happy Days
Munsters
Odd Couple
BE
Dick Van
Dyke
Newhart BE
Bob
Newhart
Taxi ®
Rhoda
Phyllis
Betty White
(Part 1 of 2)
SCIFI
Movie: *'/2 “Xtro 3: Watch the Skies" (1995) Sal Landi.
Sightings (In Stereo) BE
Alien Voices: First-Moon
Flash (In Stereo) BE
Robocop: The Series BE
| Web (R)
New Edge
CNet
Sightings (In Stereo) BE |
TBS
WCW Pro Wrestling BE
[Home
Videos
[Home
Videos
National Geographic Explorer BE
Wild! Life Adventures
"Tiger" (In Stereo) BS
TOPX
National Geographic Explorer (R) BE
Paid
Program
Paid
Program
TLC
Super Highway Robbery
Trauma II -- Life in the ER
Extreme Machines (R) [How’d They Do That?
Deadliest Volcanoes
Earth’s Fury (R)
How’d They Do That? | Deadliest Volcanoes
| Earth’s Fury (R)
TNT
(4:30) Movie: **'/2 “Hang ’Em High" (1968) A rancher
swears revenge on the men who tried to lynch him.
Eastwood on Eastwood The career of
actor-director Clint Eastwood. (In Stereo)
Movie: ★★V2 “Tightrope"(1984, Suspense) Clint Eastwood. A cop
pursues a psychopath in New Orleans’ French Quarter.
Eastwood on Eastwood The career of
| actor-director Clint Eastwood. (In Stereo)
Eastwood on Eastwood The career of 1
actor-director Clint Eastwood. (In Stereo) |
USA
(4:00) Movie: "Child's
\Play2"(1990, Horror)
[Movie: ★'/2 "Child's Play 3"(1991, Horror) A newly
rejuvenated Chucky tracks down his former owner.
[Pacific Blue “Cop in a
Box" (In Stereo) BE
Silk Stalkings “Family
Affair" (In Stereo) BE
[La Femme Nikita
“Treason" (In Stereo)®
Big Easy “A Perfect Day
for Buffalo Fish" (In Stereo)
Silk Stalkings "Silent
Witness" (R) (In Stereo) BE
Paid
| Program
Paid
| Program
DISN
Dinosaurs
BE
I Growing
Pains BE
Growing
Pains BE
I Muppets
Tonight! BE
[Going Wild!
BE
lOmba
Mokomba
Timon &
PumbaaBE
I Aladdin ®
Walt Disney Presents
“Swamp Fox" BS
Movie: ★** “Old Yeller" (1957, Drama)
Dorothy McGuire, Fess Parker. ‘G’ ®
True Life
Adventure
Zorro (In
Stereo) ®
Mickey
Mouse Club
Movie: *★'/2 "The Cat
\From Outer Space" (1978) |
HBO
(4:00) Movie: “Independence Day"
(1996) Will Smith. (In Stereo) 'PG-13’ BE
Movie: *-★ “Bushwhacked" (1995,
Comedy) Daniel Stern, Jon Polito. ‘PG’ BE
Movie: “Airplane!" (1980, Comedy)
Robert Hays, Julie Hagerty. ‘PG'HE
[Movie: *★*
Irish rebel ste
"Michael Collins" (1996) Liam Neeson. An
ps up the fight to break British rule. ‘R’ BE
Chris Rock
(In Stereo)
Movie: “Acts of Betrayal" 1997) Maria
Conchita Alonso. (In Stereo) ‘NR’ ®
“The Last
Boy Scout"
MAX
(3:45) Movie: *★ “Steal
\Big, Steal Little" (1995) BE
I Movie: *** “Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country"
(1991, Science Fiction) William Shatner. ‘PG’ BE
Movie: ★★ V2 “What’s Eating Gilbert Grape” (1993) A
grocery store worker sacrifices all for his family. ‘PG-13’
Movie: “Leprechaun 4 in Space" (1996,
Horror) Warwick Davis, Brent Jasmer. ‘R’
Movie: * “Chasers" (1994) Tom Berenger. Two sailors
escort a sultry captive to prison. (In Stereo) ‘R’ ®
* “Little
Witches" ‘R’
SHO
(4:55) Movie: *★ “Ruby Jean and Joe"
1996, Drama) Tom Selleck. ‘PG-13’
|On the Set:
Star
[Stargate
SG-1 (R) BE
I Stargate SG-1 “The Nox"
Locating invisible beings.
[Outer
Limits®
[Outer Limits A priest has
hallucinations. (In Stereo)
Hunger
“Room 17"
[Hunger
“Necros" ®
| Poltergeist:
| The Legacy
Poltergeist: The Legacy
“Bones of St. Anthony" 'BE
Movie: ★* “Castle Freak" (1995, Horror)
Jeffrey Combs. (In Stereo) ‘R’
TMC
(3:55) Movie
Movie: ★★ “The Last Word" (1995) Timothy Hutton. A
journalist discovers his life is being manipulated. ‘R’
Movie: ★★V2 "Caddyshack” (1980,
Comedy) Chevy Chase, Bill Murray. ‘R’
Movie: ★★V2 "Kingpin" (1996, Comedy) A washed-up
bowler takes on an Amish farmer as a protege. 'PG-13'
Roger Corman Presents “Alien
Avengers”
Movie: “Markus4"(1996, Science
Fiction) Bentley Mitchum. (In Stereo) ‘R‘
Boilermakers Local #169
Supports the
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Workers.
in the pubUcservice
LOCAL 1346
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Send our support to Newspaper
V Workers in Their Struggle .
Charlie Kerszykowski
Business Manager & Financial Secretary
I.B.E.W. - Local 17
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the job safely!
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MONDAY MORNING/AFTERNOON NOVEMBER 3,1997
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
Eyewitness Morning
Geraldo Rivera SB
Home Team (In Stereo) SB
Boss? |Cosby
News
Pictionary
Hollywood | Extra SB
Geraldo Rivera SB
Ricki Lake
Rosie O’Donnell SB
NBC
o
(7:00) Today (In Stereo) ®
Maury SB
Jerry Springer
Jenny Jones (In Stereo)
News
Jeopardy!
Days of Our Lives SB
Another World SB
Sally SB
Montel Williams SB
ABC
o
Good Morning America
Regis & Kathie
Martha
Gayle King
People’s Court (In Stereo)
News
Pt. Charles
All My Children SB
One Life to Live SB
General Hos
jital SB
Oprah Winfrey SB
CBC
o
(7:00) CBC Morning News
Playground |SesamePk
Theodore
Mr. Dressup
Wimzie | Life Signs
Midday SB
Encore to Pamela Wallin
E.N.G “The Victims"
Coronat’n
Urban P.
Jonovision
The Bill
WB
0)
Mask
Garfield
Medicine Woman
700 Club
In the Heat of the Night
Honeymnr
Hillbillies
Hawaii Five-0
Bananas
X-Men SB
BugsDaffy
Animaniacs
PinkyBrain
Batman
UPN
@D
Wacky
Bobby
Casper SB |Dinosaurs
Step-Step
Blossom SB
Sunset Beach SB
All-Family
Jeffersons
Sanford | Good Times
Spider-Man
Metallix
Rangers
Goosebmp
Breaker
Sw. Valley
PBS
m
Groundling
Puzzle
Sesame Street (In Stereo)
Barney
Mr Rogers
Storytime | Reading
Arthur SB
Theodore
Sesame Street (In Stereo)
Barney
Couch
Arthur SB
Magic Bus
Sandiego
Wishbone
CBS
GB
(7:00) This Morning SB
Quincy
Guiding Light (In Stereo)
Price Is Right SB
Murphy
Young and the Restless | Bold & B.
As the World Turns SB
Judge Judy
Judge Judy
Newlywed
Dating
A&E
Columbo "Dead Weight" |Columbo "Murder by the Book” |Quincy (Part 1 of 2)
Northern Exposure SB | Law & Order SB
Columbo “Dead Weight"
Columbo "Murder by the Book”
AMC
Movie: ★★V2 "No Way Out" (4950) Richard Widmark. |Movie: *** "Goodbye, My Fancy” (1951, Comedy)
Movie: *** “But Not for Me” (1959) Clark Gable.
Movie: **•* “The Lawless Breed" (1953)
Movie: **’/2 "Tobacco Road" (1941)
BET
Life
Children
Video Vibrations
Jam Zone
Jam Zone | Planet Groove Top Twenty (R)
Rap City
DISC
Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
Assignment Discovery
Home Matters
Housesmart! (R)
Interior Motives
Home Matters
Housesmart! (R)
Interior Motives
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Great Chefs
ESPN
NFL Sportscenter (R)
NFL Sportscenter (R)
NFL Sportscenter (R)
NFL Sportscenter (R)
NFL Sportscenter (R)
NYC Marathon Highlights
Skiing (R)
Wheelchr
Scholastics
Paintball
NFL Great
FAM
Rescue 911 (In Stereo) SB
Waltons “The Obstacle”
700 Club I Fit TV
Diagnosis Murder SB
Home & Family (In Stereo)
ShopDrop
Shopping
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FSD
FOX Sports News (R)
Paid Prog. |Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
NHL Hockey: Mighty Ducks of Anaheim at Detroit Red Wings. (R)
ABL Basketball: Blizzard at Rage
Sports
Skiing
LIFE
Baby
Kids These
Sisters (In Stereo) SB
Designing
Almost
Our Home (In Stereo)
Ingredient
Handmade
Commish (In Stereo) SB
Movie: *★’/2 "Anything to Survive" (1990, Drama)
Night Court
Night Court
NICK
Looney
Rugrats SB
Little Bear [BluesClues
Busy World
Muppets
Wubbulous |Gul!ah
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BluesClues
Allegra
Rupert
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Beetlejuice
Gadget
Tiny Toon
Garfield
SCIFI
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Lost in Space
Time Tunnel
Mann & Machine
Ripley’s Believe It or Not
Mysteries
Monsters
Gallery
Bradbury
Beyond
Starship
Land of the Giants
TBS
Brady
Amen
Little House
Mama
Mama
Griffith
Griffith
Matlock “The Godfather"
Movie: *★ “The Girl in the Empty Grave” (1977)
Flintstones
Flintstones
Looney
Dreams
TLC
Rorys Pice
Critters
Big Garage
Bingo
Pappyland
Gnomes
Rorys Pice
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TNT
Scooby Dooby Doo
Flintstones
Flintstones
Gilligan
Gilligan
Spenser: For Hire
Movie: "The Eiger Sanction" (1975, Suspense) Clint Eastwood.
Movie: ** "Guns of Diablo" (1964)
Lonesome Dove: Series
USA
Gargoyles
Sailor Moon
Webster SB
Facts-Life
Strangers
Gimme B.
Wings SB
Wings SB
Movie: **'/2 "The Android Affair” (1995) (In Stereo) SB
Movie: *** "Amazing Stories: The Movie V” (1992) SB
Renegade (In Stereo) SB
DISN
Goof Troop
Mermaid
Pooh
Katie-Orbie
Bear
Wonderland
Chip-Dale
Madeline SB
Mermaid [Pooh I Jungle
Tale Spin SB
Donald |Chip-Dale
Tale Spin SB |Goof Troop
Timon |Aladdin SB
HBO
"Revenge of the Nerds III: Generation"
Movie: **V2 “The Phantom" (1996) 'PG'
Making
Movie: *★ “Last of the Dogmen" (1995) ‘PG’ SB
Movie: “The Truth About Cats and Dogs"
Movie: **'/2 “A Walk in the Clouds" (1995) ‘PG-13’ SB 1
MAX
Movie: **% "My Girl2" (1993) 'PG' SB
Movie: *★* “84 Charing Cross Road" (1987) ‘PG’ SB
Movie: “Urban Cowboy" (1980) John Travolta. SB
Movie: *★>/2 “Playmates"-(1972)
Movie: *★ “Pontiac Moon” (1994) Ted Danson. SB |
SHO
(7:15) Movie: "Prime" |Movie: ★* “Canadian Bacon" (1995) Alan Alda. 'PG' |Movie: “The First Time"( 1969) 'M' |Movie: *** “Fraternity Row" (1977) |Movie: ★* “Harry and Walter Go to New York" (1976) |Movie: "Hero"( 1992)
TMC
(7:35) Movie: **** “The Lion in Winter" (1968) ‘PG’ |Movie: ★* “C.C. and Company" (1970) |Movie: "Hurricane Rosy" (1980) Gerard Depardieu. |Movie: **V2 “Wait Until Spring, Bandini" |Movie: "Summer Camp" (1994)‘PG’ I “ManSeasn"
MO
>N[
)AY EVENING NOVEMBER 3,1997
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 |
O
FOX
News
News
Real TV (In
Stereo) SB
Access
Hollywood
Extra (In
Stereo) SB
Melrose Place “Secrets
and Wives" (In Stereo) El
Ally McBeal “The Attitude"
(In Stereo) ®
News
Cheers (In
Stereo) H
Keenen Ivory Wayans (In
Stereo)
M*A*S*H ®
Cosby
Show®
Who’s the
Boss? ®
O
NBC
News
News
NBC Nightly
News SB
Wheel of
Fortune SB
Jeopardy!
SB
Suddenly
Susan SB
Caroline in
the City®
Movie: "House of Frankenstein 1997"( 1997) Grimes
tries to persuade Grace to spend eternity with him. ®
News
Tonight Show (In Stereo)
®
Jenny Jones Harassed
overweight teens. ®
Paid
Program
O
ABC
News
News
ABC Wld
News
Ent. Tonight
Primetime Live SB
NFL Football: Pittsburgh Steelers at Kansas City Chiefs. From Arrowhead Stadium.
(In StereoLive) ®
News
Nightline®
Inside
| Edition®
American
Journal ®
O
CBC
Maclean's
TV
News SB
CBC News
Riverdale SB
Royal Air
Farce
Just for
Laughs E
jGullage’s®
22 Minutes
Comics!®
National/CBC News ®
National
Update ®
News ®
Stopwatch
(Off Air)
©
WB
Full House
SB
Boy Meets
World SB
Family
Matters SB
Different
World SB
Roseanne
“Aliens” SB
Mama’s
Family
7th Heaven “Girls Just
Want to Have Fun" SB
Buffy the Vampire Slayer
“Lie to Me" (In Stereo) ®
Roseanne Mama’s
(In Stereo) Family
Cops (In
Stereo) ®
LAPD: Life
on the Beat
Highway
Patrol
Strange
Universe
Movie: ★*'/2 “Betsy's
Wedding"(t999, Comedy) 1
SD
UPN
Simpsons
(In Stereo)
Mr. Cooper
Living
Single SB
Home
Improve.
Frasier (In
Stereo) El
Home
Improve.
In the
House®
I Malcolm &
Eddie®
Good News
®
Sparks (In
Stereo)®
News
Fresh
Prince
Star Trek: The Next
Generation (In Stereo) ®
Vibe Actor Malcoim-Jamal
Warner.
Married...
With
©
PBS
Kratts’
Creatures
Science
Guy
Newshour With Jim
Lehrer SB
Business
Report
MotorWeek
(In Stereo)
Full Circle (In Stereo)
(Part 7 of 10)®
[Stephen Hawking’s
Universe®
Adventurers (In Stereo)
(Part 3 of 5) ®
Being
Served
Vicar of
|Dibley
Full Circle (In Stereo)
| (Part 7 of 10)®
Stephen Hawking’s
| Universe®
©
CBS
Grace
Under Fire
Mad About
You SB
Seinfeld (In Mad About
Stereo) SB You SB
CBS News
Hard Copy
El
Cosby (In
Stereo) ®
Everybody-
Raymond
George &
Leo®
Cybill (In
Stereo) ®
Brooklyn South (In
Stereo)®
Late Show (In Stereo) ®
In Depth
Detroit
Late Late Show (In
Stereo)®
Newlywed 1
Game
A&E
Quincy “Walk Softly
Through the Night"
Northern Exposure “The
Body in Question" ®
Law & Order "Night and |
Fog" ®
Biography: Adolf
Eichmann: Death
Movie: “Dalziel and Pascoe: Deadheads"(1997,
Mystery) Warren Clarke, Colin Buchanan.
Law & Order "Out of the
Half-Light" ®
Biography: Adolf
Eichmann: Death
Movie: “Dalziel and
Pascoe: Deadheads"
AMC
Movie: ★★★ “Guys and Dolls" (1955, Musical) Marlon Brando, Jean I
Simmons. A gambler bets he can woo a Salvation Army missionary.
Movie: ** “Tarzan and the Lost Safari"
(1957, Adventure) Gordon Scott.
Movie: “Palm Springs Weekend" (1963) Vacationing
college students invade a resort community.
Movie: ** "The Kid From Texas" (1950,
Western) Audie Murphy, Gale Storm.
Movie: *★ “Tarzan and the Lost Safari"
(1957, Adventure) Gordon Scott.
BET
(4:30) Rap City |227 ®
Planet Groove
Hit List
Comicview
BET Tonight
227®
Midnight Love
DISC
Travelers “Washington,
D.C."
Modern Combat Aircraft
(R)
Gimme Shelter (R)
Wild Discovery "Deadly
Game” (R)
Coma-The Silent
Epidemic
What Sex Am I? Search
for sexual identity. (R)
Justice Files “Con Jobs"
(R)
Wild Discovery “Deadly
Game” (R)
Coma-The Silent
Epidemic (R)
ESPN
NFL’s
Greatest
NBA Inside
Stuff
Up Close
Sportscenter
NFL Prime Monday Reviews, previews
and analysis.
Gymnastics: Magnificent Seven -- Made in America.
Cheerlead-
ing
Sportscenter ®
NFL’s Greatest Moments
NFL’s
Greatest
FAM
Bonanza: The Lost
Episodes
Carol
Burnett
Carol
Burnett
Waltons "The Gift”
Rescue 911 (In Stereo)®
Diagnosis Murder “Many
Happy Returns” (In Stereo)
Hawaii Five-0 “Presenting
in the Center Ring Murder”
700 Club
Three Stooges
Paid
Program
Paid
Program
FSD
Transworld Sport
Red Wings
Sports
Boxing
Auto Racing: FIAGT Championship.
FOX Sports News
FOX Sports News
Tennis: WTA Kremlin Cup -- Final. From Moscow. (R) I
LIFE
Golden
Girls®
Golden
Girls ®
Supermar
ket Sweep
Debt
Intimate Portrait "Brett
Butler" (R) (In Stereo) ®
Unsolved Mysteries (In
Stereo)
[Movie: “Honor Thy Mother" (1992, Drama) Sharon
IGless. A student plots to kill his parents for money.
Homicide: Life on the
Street (In Stereo) ®
Unsolved Mysteries (In
Stereo)
Sisters “The Good
Daughter” (In Stereo) ® I
NICK
You Afraid?
Rocko’s
Modern Life
Figure It
Out
Tiny Toon
Adventures
Doug (In
Stereo)®
[Rugrats (In
Stereo)®
Hey Arnold!
(In Stereo)
Happy Days
Wonder
Years ®
Bewitched
I Love Lucy
®
Odd Couple
®
Taxi "Alex's
Old Buddy"
pewhart ®
Mary Tyler
Moore®
Dick Van
Dyke
Bob
Newhart
Rhoda
SCIFI
Six Million Dollar Man
Twilight Zone "The Bard"
Time Trax “Mother" (R) ®
Seaquest DSV®
Forever Knight (In Stereo)
Genesis
Genesis
Time Trax “Mother” (R) ®
Seaquest DSV ffl
Forever Knight (In Stereo)
TBS
Saved by
the Bell ®
[Saved by
the Bell ®
Family
Matters ®
Family
Matters ®
Coach (In
Stereo) ®
Coach (In
Stereo) ®
Movie: **'/!2 "Poison /vy” (1992) Drew Barrymore. A
teen-age temptress disrupts a wealthy household.
Movie: ** "The Sitter" (1991, Suspense) Kim Myers. A
neurotic baby sitter wreaks havoc at a luxury hotel.
Wild! Life Adventures
“Tiger” (R) (In Stereo) ®
TOPX (R)
TLC
Work in Progress
Hometime
Hometime
Home Again
Home Again
Extreme Machines (R) |Earth’s Fury (R)
Tornado! Hrcn | Extreme Machines (R)
Earth’s Fury (R)
Tornado! Hrcn
TNT
In the Heat of the Night
“A Depraved Heart” ®
Kung Fu: The Legend
Continues (R)
Lois & Clark: The New
Adventures of Superman
WCW Nitro (In StereoLive) ®
WCW Nitro (R) (In Stereo) ®
Movie: ★*** "The Great Escape" (1963) Allied POWs 1
stage a daring escape from a Nazi prison camp.
USA
Saved by
Bell
USA High
(In Stereo)
Baywatch "Fire With Fire"
(In Stereo) ®
Highlander: The Series
"Mountain Men" ®
Walker, Texas Ranger “El
Coyote” ®
jWWF Raw (In Stereo) ®
[WWF War Zone (In
Stereo)®
Silk Stalkings “Dead
Weight" (R) (In Stereo) ®
Highlander: The Series
|“Deadly Medicine" ®
C-Net
Central
Magnum,
P.l.®
DISN
Dinosaurs
®
Growing
Pains ®
Growing
Pains®
[Brotherly
Love ®
Movie: ★★ “A Goofy Movie" (1995,
Comedy) Voices of Bill Farmer. ‘G’ ®
[Movie: "Just Like Dad"( 1996, Drama)
Wallace Shawn. (In Stereo) ®
[Movie: “No Dessert Dad, 'Til You
I Mow the Lawn" (1994) Joanna Kerns. ®
Movie: *'/2 “Superdad"(1974, Comedy)
Bob Crane, Kurt Russell. ‘G’ ®
Movie: ★★Vi “You Ruined
My Life" (1987)
HBO
Journey of tf
American Atl
le African-
hlete
Movie: “Dreamrider" (1992, Drama)
Matthew Geriak. (In Stereo) ‘PG’
| Storyteller:
Grk.
|Movie: ★* 1 /2 “The Phantom"(1996,
Adventure) Billy Zane. (In Stereo) ‘PG’ ®
[Movie: *** “The Truth About Cats and Dogs" (1996)
|a radio host lies about her looks to a potential suitor. ®
Mr. Show
With
Best of Sex Bytes (R) (In
Stereo) ®
Movie: **'/2 "Ricochet"
(1991) Denzel Washington.
MAX
Movie: “Bingo” (1991) A cle
goes in search of his adopte
iver canine
id family. ‘PG’
|Movie: ★'/2 “Feds" (1988, Comedy)
Rebecca De Mornay. ‘PG-13' ®
Movie: ★★★V2 “JFK" (1991, Drama) Kevin Costner, Sissy Spacek, Joe Pesci.
Based on the alleged conspiracy surrounding JFK's death. (In Stereo) 'R' ®
Movie: ** "White Man’s Burden” (1995,
Drama) John Travolta. (In Stereo) ‘R’ ®
Movie: ** “Midnight Blue" (1997,
|Suspense) Damian Chapa. (In Stereo) ‘R'J
SHO
(4:15) Movie: **V2 “Hero"
(1992) Dustin Hoffman.
[Movie: ** “Canadian Bacon"(1995) A restless, post-
Cold War America declares war on Canada. ‘PG’ ®
Stargate SG-1 A survivor
bears a bomb. (In Stereo)
Movie: ** “Striptease" (1996) Demi Moore. A Miami
mother becomes a stripper to raise some quick cash. ®
Movie: * "Showgirls" (1995) Elizabeth Berkley. An
ambitious dancer makes a bid for Las Vegas success.
Movie: ★* "Mrs. Munck 1
1(1996) Diane Ladd. ‘R’
TMC
(4:40) Movie: “A Ma.
Seasons" (1966) Paul Scofi
n for All
eld. ‘G’
Movie: “The Lion in Winter"(t968, Drama) Peter O’Toole.
Henry II must determine which son is worthy of the crown. 'PG'
Movie: ★★ “Mrs. Winterbourne" (1996) A twist of fate
drops a runaway into a family of snobs. ‘PG-13’
Movie: "Mulholland Falls" (1996,
Drama) Nick Nolte. (In Stereo) ‘R’ ®
Movie: **** “The French Connection" 1
(1971, Drama) Gene Hackman. ‘R’
THE ENTIRE
MEMBERSHIP OF
LOCAL 5960, UAW
SUPPORT THE EFFORTS OF THE
NEWSPAPER WORKERS!
GITTLEMAN, PASKEL,
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For more information, call 1-800-446-1802 and press “2”.
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Page 18 - [see page image]
TUESDAY MORNING/AFTERNOON
NOVEMBER 4,1997
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9:00
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3:00
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4:00
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FOX
0
Eyewitness Morning
Geraldo Rivera [
Home Team (In Stereo) I
Boss? | Cosby
News
Pictionary Hollywood |Extra!
Geraldo Rivera [
Ricki Lake
Rosie O’Donnell I
NBC
O
(7:00) Today (In Slereo) I
Maury [
Jerry Springer
Jenny Jones (In Stereo)
News
Jeopardy!
Days of Our Lives I
Another World [
Sally [
Montel Williams [
ABC
O
Good Morning America
Regis & Kathie
Martha Gayle King
People’s Court (In Stereo)
News
Pt. Charles
All My Children [
One Life to Live [
General Hospital I
Oprah Winfrey [
CBC
O
(7:00) CBC Morning News
Playground |SesamePk~
Theodore |Mr. Dressup
Wimzie
Lead [
Midday [
Encore to Pamela Wallin
E.N.G
Coronat’n
Urban P.
Jonovision
The Bill
WB
0D
Mask
Garfield
Medicine Woman
700 Club
In the Heat of the Night
Honeymnr
Hillbillies
Hawaii Five-0
Bananas X-Men
BugsDaffy
Animaniacs
PinkyBrain
Batman
UPN
©
Wacky
Bobby
Casper [
Dinosaurs
Step-Step Blossom
Sunset Beach [
All-Family
Jeffersons
Sanford Good Times
Spider-Man
Metallix
Rangers
Goosebmp
Breaker
Sw. Valley
PBS
©
Groundling Puzzle
Sesame Street (In Stereo)
Barney
Mr Rogers
Storytime | Reading
Arthur [
Tots TV!
Sesame Street (In Stereo)
Barney
Couch
Arthur:
Magic Bus
Sandiego
Wishbone
CBS
©
(7:00) This Morning I
Quincy “Images"
Guiding Light (In Stereo)
Price Is Right [
Murphy
Young and the Restless Bold & B.
As the World Turns!
Judge Judy
Judge Judy
Newlywed
Dating
A&E
McCloud “A Little Plot at Tranquil Valley" iBanacek
Quincy (Part 2 of 2) |Northern Exposure ®
Law & Order ® |McCloud "A Little Plot at Tranquil Valley” |Banacek
AMC
(6:30) Movie: “Guys-Dolls"
Movie: *** “The Joker Is Wild" (1957) Frank Sinatra.
Movie: *** “Force of Arms" (1951) William Holden.
Movie: *** 1 /2 "The Four Feathers" (1939, Adventure) |Movie: ★** “The Four Musketeers" (1975) 'PG'
BET
John A. Cherry
Video Vibrations
Jam Zone
Jam Zone | Planet Groove (R)
Rap City
DISC
Paid Prog. |Paid Prog.
Assignment Discovery
Home Matters
Housesmart! (R)
Interior Motives
Home Matters
Housesmart! (R)
Interior Motives | Great Chefs
Great Chefs
ESPN
Sportscenter (R)
Sportscenter (R)
Sportscenter (R)
Sportscenter (R)
Sportscenter (R)
Golf: Wonderful World of Golf. (R) | Yachting
Equestrian: National Horse Show. (R)
NFL Great
FAM
Rescue 911 (In Stereo)®
Waltons “The Parting"
700 Club I Fit TV
Diagnosis Murder®
Home & Family (In Stereo)
ShopDrop [Shopping |Big Valley
FSD
FOX Sports News (R)
Paid Prog. |Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
ABL Basketball: Blizzard at Rage
Women’s College Volleyball: Cincinnati at Louisville.
NPSL Soccer: Edmonton Drillers at Detroit Rockers.
LIFE
Baby
Kids These
Sisters (In Stereo) ®
Designing
Almost
Our Home (In Stereo)
Ingredient
Handmade
Commish ®
Movie: “Betrayal of Trust"(1994, Drama) Judith Light.
Night Court
Night Court |
NICK
Looney
Rugrats ®
Little Bear |BluesClues
Busy World
Muppets
Wubbulous (Gullah
Little Bear
BluesClues
Allegra
Rupert
Muppets
Looney
Beetlejuice
Gadget
Tiny Toon
Garfield
SCIFI
Incredible Hulk “Jake”
Lost in Space
Time Tunnel
Mann & Machine
Ripley’s Believe It or Not
Mysteries
Monsters
Gallery
Bradbury
Beyond
Odyssey ®
Land of the Giants
TBS
Brady
Amen
Little House
Mama
Mama
Griffith
Griffith
Matlock “The Celebrity” ®
|Movie: ** “Deadly Game" (1977) Andy Griffith.
Flintstones
Flintstones
Looney
Dreams
TLC
Rorys Pice
Critters
Big Garage
Bingo
Pappyland
Gnomes
Rorys Pice
Skinnmrk
Kerr’s ICucina
Great Inns llnntimate
jOnlnside lOnlnside
Wedding
Wedding
Great Inns
Inntimate |
TNT
Scooby Dooby Doo
Flintstones
Flintstones
Gilligan
Gilligan
Spenser: For Hire
Movie: **Vi “Cat's Eye" (1985, Horror) James Woods.
Movie: ** 1 /2 “The Sheepman" (1958) Glenn Ford.
Lonesome Dove: Series I
USA
Gargoyles
Sailor Moon
Webster ®
Facts-Life
Strangers
Gimme B.
Wings ®
Wings ®
Movie: ** "Evil Has a Face" (1996) Sean Young, ffl
Movie: *** “Tucker: The Man and His Dream" (1988)
Renegade “The Late Shift"!
DISN
Goof Troop
Mermaid
Pooh
Katie-Orbie
Bear
Wonderland
Chip-Dale
Madeline®
Mermaid I Pooh
[Jungle iTaleSpin®
| Donald |Chip-Dale
Tale Spin ® |Goof Troop
[Timon
Aladdin ® |
HBO
Movie: * “Missing Pieces" (1992) ‘PG’
Movie: “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” (1986)
Movie: ** “HidingOut" (1987) Jon Cryer. ‘PG-13’ SB
Movie: ★** "Crime of the Century" (1996) ‘PG-13’ SB I
|Movie:** 1 /2 "The Cherokee Kid" (1996)
“In Crowd" |
MAX
Movie: “Celestial Clockwork" (1993) ‘NR’
“Ernie Kovacs: Between the Laughter"
Movie: ** "Hard Promises" (1991) William Peterson.
| Movie:** “Big Top Pee-wee" (1988) ® | Movie: “The Night Stalker" | Movie: “Never Say Never Again" (1983) |
SHO
(7:25) Movie: “WW-Dixie" \ Movie: *’/2 “What Every Woman Wants" |Movie: **V!i "Top Secret!” (1984) 'PG' |Movie: *** “The Pit and the Pendulum" |Movie: *** “The Other" (1972) ‘PG’ |Movie: ** “Old Explorers" {1990) 'PG' | “Defiance"
TMC
(7:50) Movie: ** "Moonshine Highway" |Movie: *V2 "Bwana Devil" (1952) |Movie: ** "FullMoon Hiqh"( 1981) 'PG' |Movie: "Once in a Blue Moon"( 1995) |Movie: *% "Robbers’ Roost"(1955) |Movie: ** "Vibrations" (1994) ‘R’ ®
| TUESDAY EVENING NOVEMBER 4,1997 |
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 I
O
FOX
News
News
Real TV (In
Stereo) ®
Access
Hollywood
Extra (In
Stereo) ®
World’s Scariest Police
Chases 3 (In Stereo) (PA)
Prisoners Out of Control
(In Stereo) (PA) ®
News
Cheers (In
Stereo) ®
Keenen Ivory Wayans (In
Stereo)
M*A*S*H ®
Cosby
Show®
Who’s the
Boss? ®
O
NBC
News
News
NBC Nightly
News ®
Wheel of
Fortune ®
Jeopardy!
®
Mad About
You ®
Newsradio
(In Stereo)
Frasier “The
Kid" ®
Just Shoot
Me ®
Dateline (In Stereo) ®
News
Tonight Show (In Stereo)
®
Jenny Jones Guests relish
[new beauty. (In Stereo) ®
Paid
Program
O
ABC
News
News
ABC Wld
News
Ent. Tonight
Soul Man
(In Stereo)
Over the
Top®
Home
Improve.
Hiller and
Diller®
NYPD Blue “It Takes a
Village" (In Stereo) (PA) ®
News
Nightline ®
Inside
Edition ®
American
|journal ®
Politically
| Incorrect ® |
Arthel &
Fred
O
CBC
Schlesinger
®
News®
CBC News
Riverdale ®
Undercur
rents ®
Market
Place ®
Venture ®
Fifth Estate ®
National/CBC News ®
National
Update ®
News ®
Stopwatch
(Off Air)
©
WB
Full House
®
Boy Meets
World ®
Family
Matters ®
Different
World ®
Roseanne
®
Mama’s
Family
Movie: **V!2 “Three Men and a Little Lady" (1990)
Three bachelors may lose their cherubic 5-year-old.
Roseanne Mama’s
(In Stereo) Family
Cops (In
Stereo) ®
LAPD: Life
on the Beat
Highway
Patrol
Strange
Universe
Movie: ** 1 /2 “First to
| Fight" {1967, Drama)
©
UPN
Simpsons
(In Stereo)
Mr. Cooper
Living
Single ®
Home
Improve.
Frasier (In
Stereo) ®
Home
Improve.
Moesha (In
Stereo)®
I Clueless (In
Stereo)®
|Malcolm &
Eddie (R)®
iHitz (In
Stereo)®
News
Fresh
Prince
Star Trek: The Next
Generation (In Stereo) ®
Vibe John Travolta,
Carmen Electra.
Married...
With
©
PBS
Kratts’
Creatures
Science
Guy
Newshour With Jim
Lehrer ®
Business
Report
Back to
Back
Lewis & Clark: The Journey of the Corps of
Discovery The story of the Lewis and Clark expedition.
Alligator!
Being
Served
Chef! “Time
Flies"
Lewis & Clark: The Journey of the Corps of
Discovery The story of the Lewis and Clark expedition. |
©
CBS
Grace
Under Fire
Mad About
You ®
Seinfeld (In
Stereo) ®
Mad About
You ®
CBS News
Hard Copy
®
JAG “Against All Enemies”
(In Stereo) ®
Michael Hayes “Death
and Taxes" (In Stereo)®
Dellaventura “Hell’s
Kitchen” (In Stereo) ®
Late Show (In Stereo) ®
Hard Copy
®
Late Late Show (In
Stereo)®
Mewlywed |
Game
A&E
Quincy “Walk Softly
Through the Night"
Northern Exposure
"Roots” ®
Law & Order
“Performance" ®
Biography “Jean Harlow:
Platinum Bombshell" (R)
Movie: “Silent Witness: Cease Upon the Midnight"
(1997, Mystery) Amanda Burton, Mick Ford.
Law & Order “Happily
Ever After” ®
Biography “Jean Harlow:
Platinum Bombshell" (R)
Movie: "Silent Witness:
Cease Upon the Midnight"
AMC
Movie: *** “My Six Loves" (1963) A Broadway
actress is adopted by six abandoned children.
Movie: **'/2 “Showdown at Abilene”
(1956, Western) Jock Mahoney.
Movie: *** “Ocean’s Eleven" (1960, Comedy) One- |
time paratroopers rob five casinos on New Year's Eve.
Movie: ***'/2 “Young Man With a Horn" (1950) A
young musician’s love life nearly costs him his career. |
Movie: ** 1 /2 “Showdown at Abilene"
(1956, Western) Jock Mahoney.
BET
(4:30) Rap City |227 ®
Planet Groove
Hit List
Comicview
BET Tonight
[227®
Midnight Love
DISC
Travelers "San Jose”
Wings “Wings Over
Vietnam” (R)
Gimme Shelter (R)
Wild Discovery “Saving
the Tiger” (R)
New Detectives “Deadly
Target" (R)
Secrets of the Pharaohs
(R)
Justice Files “Slaughtered
Innocence” (R)
Wild Discovery “Saving
the Tiger” (R)
New Detectives “Deadly |
Target” (R)
ESPN
NFL's
Greatest
NBA Today
Up Close
Sportscenter
[Outside the
Lines
Town Meeting: Sportsmanship in the
'90s -- Is Winning the Only Thing?. (Live)
NFL’s
Greatest
Dick Vitale’s College
Basketball Preview
Sportscenter ®
Strongest
Man
Strongest
| Man
Timber
Series
NBA Today
(R)
FAM
Bonanza: The Lost
Episodes
Carol
Burnett
Carol
Burnett
Waltons “The Fire"
Movie: **** “All the President’s Men" (1976, Drama) Robert Redford, Dustin
Hoffman. Woodward and Bernstein uncover the Watergate scandal. ®
700 Club
jThree Stooges
Paid
Program
Paid
Program
FSD
Futbol
CART
NHL Shots
Sports
Pistons |NBA Basketball: Detroit Pistons at Atlanta Hawks. From the Omni. | FOX Sports News
FOX Sports News
|NBA Basketball: Detroit Pistons at Atlanta Hawks. (R) 1
LIFE
Golden
Girls®
Golden
Girls ®
Supermar
ket Sweep
Debt
Intimate Portrait “Reba
McEntire” (In Stereo)®
Unsolved Mysteries (In
Stereo)
Movie: ** “Fine Things" (1990, Drama) Tracy Pollan, D.W. Moffett, Cloris
Leachman. A widower's stepdaughter is taken by her natural father.
Unsolved Mysteries (In
| Stereo)
Sisters “Something in
Common” (In Stereo) ®
NICK
You Afraid?
Rocko’s
Modern Life
Figure It
Out
Tiny Toon
Adventures
Doug (In
Stereo) ®
Rugrats (In
Stereo) ®
Secret of
Alex
I Happy Days
Wonder
Years ®
[Bewitched [
“Prodigy”
1 Love Lucy
®
Odd Couple
®
Taxi “Sugar
Ray Nardo”
Newhart ®
Mary Tyler
Moore ®
Dick Van
Dyke
Bob
Newhart
Rhoda“The |
Ultimatum” 1
SCIFI
Six Million Dollar Man
Twilight Z.
Twilight Z.
Time Trax “The Last MIA"
Seaquest DSV®
Forever Knight (In Stereo)
Tekwar “Tek Posse”®
| Time Trax “The Last MIA"
[Seaquest DSV ®
|Forever Knight (In Stereo)!
TBS
Saved by
the Bell ®
Saved by
the Bell ®
Family
Matters ®
Family
Matters ®
Coach (In
Stereo) ®
Coach (In
Stereo)®
Movie: *** "The Deliberate Stranger” (1986, Drama) Mark Harmon, Frederic Forrest, George Grizzard.
Chronicles serial killer Ted Bundy’s six-state rampage.
Movie: *** “Th§ Deliberate Stranger" (1986, Drama) |
Chronicles serial killer Ted Bundy's six-state rampage. |
TLC
Work in Progress
Hometime
Hometime
Home Again
Home Again
Trauma II - Life in the ER lEarth’s Fury (R) |Earth’s Fury (R)
| Trauma II-- Life in the ER
[Earth’s Fury (R)
Earth’s Fury (R)
TNT
In the Heat of the Night
“A Baby Called Rocket" ®
Kung Fu: The Legend
Continues “Target" (R)
Lois & Clark: The New
Adventures of Superman
NBA Basketball: Houston Rockets at Seattle SuperSonics. From the
Key Center. (In StereoLive) ®
Inside the
NBA
Movie: ** “Take This Job and Shove /f” (1981) Robert
Hays. Blue-collar workers stand up to brewery bosses.
Movie: **Vi2 "The
Hindenburg"( 1975)
USA
Saved by
Bell
USA High
“The Model"
Baywatch “Wet and Wild”
(In Stereo) ®
Highlander: The Series
“Deadly Medicine" ®
Walker, Texas Ranger “El
Coyote" ®
[Boxing: Levi Billups vs. Tim Witherspoon. (In
StereoLive)®
Silk Stalkings “Giant
Steps” (R) (In Stereo) ®
Highlander: The Series
‘ The Sea Witch" ®
Magnum, P.l. “Adelaide"
®
DISN
Dinosaurs
®
Growing
Pains ®
Growing
Pains®
| Brotherly
Love®
Movie: ** 1 /> “Homeward Bound II: Lost
\in San Francisco" (1996) Robert Hays. ®
|Movie: ** “The Shaggy Dog" (1994,
Comedy) Ed Begley Jr.. ®
[Movie: **'/2 "Somewhere in Time" (1980) A playwright
Itravels back in time to meet a lovely actress. ‘PG’
Movie: *** “Voyage to the Bottom of
\the Sea"(1961) Walter Pidgeon. ‘PG’ ®
(Off Air)
HBO
(4:30) Movie: ** “The In
Crowd" (1988) ‘PG’
Movie: **'/;2 "Ferris Bueller’s Day Off" (1986) A brash
teen plays hooky and borrows a vintage Ferrari. ‘PG-13’
|Movie: *** “Sleepers"(1996, Drama) Kevin Bacon. A revenge crime
reunites four friends from Hell's Kitchen. (In Stereo) ‘R’ ®
|Calling Dr. Kevorkian: A
| Date With Dr. Death®
Movie: “Normal Life" (1996) A disturbed
wife corrupts a police officer’s judgment.
Chris Rock
| (In Stereo)
Movie: *'/2
“The Donor"
MAX
(3:45) Movie: ★★★ “Never
Say Never Again" (1983)
Movie: ** “Aspen Extreme" (1992) Paul Gross. Two
blue-collar buddies become Colorado ski instructors. ®
Movie: ★** “Pretty in Pink" (1986) Molly Ringwald. A
poor eclectic teen is romanced by a wealthy classmate.
Movie: **V2 “The £x”(1996, Suspense)
Yancy Butler. (In Stereo) 'R' ®
Movie: **V!2 “Sudden Impact" (1983) Clint Eastwood.
Detective Harry Callahan searches for a serial killer. ‘R’
Movie:
“Hindsight”
SHO
(4:35) Movie: “Defiance” (1979) A sailor
protects senior citizens from street thuqs.
iMovie: **'/2 "Top Secret!"(1984,
Comedy) Val Kilmer, Omar Sharif. 'PG'
Movie: *** “Pretty Woman" [ 1990) Richard Gere. An
executive plays Pygmalion to a young streetwalker. ‘R’
Movie: * “The Glass Cage" (1996,
Suspense) Charlotte Lewis. 'R'
On the Set:
Star
Women-
| Passion
Compro-
|mising
Movie: *'/2 "Barb Wire"
1(1996, Adventure) ‘R’®
TMC
(3:35) Movie
Movie: “Vibes" (1988) Two psychics help
hunt for a legendary treasure in Ecuador.
Movie: ** “Unforgettable" (1996) Ray Liotta. An
experimental drug holds the key to identifying a killer. ®
Movie: -kVi “Johnny Mnemonic" (1995,
Science Fiction) Keanu Reeves. ‘R’ ®
Movie: *'/;2 “Human Timebomb” (1996) A computer
chip turns an FBI agent into a weapon of war. ‘R’
Movie: “10” (1979) A songwriter in a
midlife crisis pursues his dream woman. |
LOCAL 2500
will continue to support our
fellow union brothers and sis
ters in their struggle withThe
Detroit News and Free Press.
“We Stick Together”
SALLY EILEEN JOHN HENRY
BIER DAVIS JR.
president Financial
Secretary/T r easurer
ht the public service
liOCAli 1815
Warren Consolidated Schools
Support the Newspaper Workers in their fight
for their rights to dignity and justice,
Shut Down /
Motown ‘97 \* HASTING
r APERS
CWA10CA1 # 4008
From our Membership,
Executive Board, and Officers:
We Support The
Newspaper Workersly
Region 1-D
Local 2151
Members
Support Locked-Out
Newspaper Workers
P.O.Box 136,
Coopersville, Ml 49404
Page 19 - [see page image]
WEDNESDAY MORNING/AFTERNOON
NOVEMBER 5,1997
8:00
BROADCAST 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
4:30
FOX
0
Eyewitness Morning
Geraldo Rivera I
Home Team (In Stereo) [
Boss?
| Cosby
News
Pictionary Hollywood [Extra!
Geraldo Rivera [
Ricki Lake
Rosie O’Donnell I
NBC
(7:00) Today (In Stereo) I
Maury El
Jerry Springer
Jenny Jones (In Stereo)
News
Jeopardy!
Days of Our Lives I
Another World [
Sally ®
Montel Williams [
ABC
O
Good Morning America
Regis & Kathie
Martha Gayle King
People’s Court (In Stereo)
News
Pt. Charles
All My Children I
One Life to Live!
General Hospital
Oprah Winfrey OB
CBC
O
(7:00) CBC Morning News
Playground [SesamePk
Theodore
Mr. Dressup
Wimzie
Lead [
Midday ®
Encore to Pamela Wallin
E.N.G “In the Blood”
Coronat’n
Urban P.
Jonovision
The Bill
WB
QD
Mask
Garfield
Medicine Woman
700 Club
In the Heat of the Night
Honeymnr
Hillbillies
Hawaii Five-0
Bananas X-Men
BugsDaffy
Animani js
PinkyBrain
Batman
UPN
SD
Wacky
Bobby
Casper ® | Dinosaurs"
Step-Step Blossom
Sunset Beach!
All-Family
Jeffersons
Sanford | Good Times
Spider-Man
Metallix
Rangers
Goosebmp
Breaker
Sw. Valley
PBS
©
Groundling Puzzle
Sesame Street (In Stereo)
Barney
Mr Rogers
Storytime | Reading
Arthur [
Theodore Sesame Street (In Stereo)
Barney
Couch
Arthur IS
Magic Bus
Sandiego
Wishbone
CBS
©
(7:00) This Morning [
Quincy (Part 2 of 2)
CABLE CHANNELS
A&E
McCloud "The Barefoot Stewardess Caper"
Guiding Light (In Stereo)
Mike Hammer
Price Is Right [
Murphy
Young and the Restless I Bold & B.
As the World Turns [
Judge Judy
Judge Judy
Newlywed
Dating
| Quincy
I Northern Exposure HI [ Law & Order “Doubles" ® | McCloud “The Barefoot Stewardess Caper"
Mike Hammer
AMC
(7:30) Movie: “Body and Soul" (1947) SB |Movie: “The Talk of the Town" (1942) Cary Grant. |Movie: ★★VI? "The Killers’ '(1946) Burt Lancaster. SB (Movie: jrkVt Red Line 7000" (1965) James Caan. |Movie: "The Miracle of Morgan's Creek"
BET
Facts
Popoff
Video Vibrations
Jam Zone
Jam Zone | Planet Groove (R)
Rap City
DISC
Paid Prog-
Paid Prog.
Assignment Discovery
Home Matters
Housesmart! (R)
Interior Motives
Home Matters
Housesmart! |
| Interior Motives
Great Chefs Great Chefs
ESPN
Sportscenter (R)
Sportscenter (R)
Sportscenter (R)
Sportscenter (R)
Sportscenter (R)
Sports |Quarter Horse Racing (R) [Breeders’ Cup
Racehorse
B3
FAM
Rescue 911 (In Stereo) [
Waltons “The Burden”
700 Club
Fit TV
Diagnosis Murder [
Home & Family (In Stereo)
ShopDrop | Shopping
Big Valley “Pursuit"
FSD
FOX Sports News (R)
Paid Prog. [Paid ProgT
Paid Prog.
NBA Basketball: Detroit Pistons at Atlanta Hawks. (R)
Tennis: WTA Kremlin Cup ■
Final. (R)
Snowboarding (R)
Skiing (R)
Football
LIFE
Baby
Kids These
Sisters “Best Intentions"
Designing
Almost Our Home (In Stereo) Ingredient Handmade
Commish!
Movie: ★★ "The Comeback" (1989) Robert Urich.
Night Court
Night Court
NICK
Looney
Rugrats [
Little Bear |BluesClues^
Busy World |Muppets
Wubbulous [Gullah
Little Bear
BluesClues
Allegra
Rupert
Muppets
Looney
Beetlejuice
Gadget
Tiny Toon
Garfield
SCIFI
Incredible Hulk
Lost in Space
Time Tunnel
Mann & Machine
Ripley’s Believe It or Not
Mysteries Monsters Gallery
Bradbury
Beyond
Odyssey [
Land of the Giants
TBS
Brady
Amen
Little House
Mama
Mama
Griffith
Griffith
Matlock “The Strangler"
Movie: “Midway” (1976, Drama) Charlton Heston.
Flintstones
Flintstones
Looney
Dreams
TLC
Rorys Pice Critters
Big Garage Bingo
Pappyland
Gnomes
Rorys Pice Skinnmrk
Kerr’s
[Cucina
Great Inns |lnntimate [Onlnside
Onlnside
Wedding
Wedding
Great Inns
Inntimate
TNT
Scooby Dooby Poo
Flintstones
Flintstones
Gilligan
Gilligan
Spenser: For Hire
Movie:** 1 /!; ‘‘The Hindenburg" (1975, Drama) George C. Scott. |Movie: “Decision at Sundown” (1957)
Lonesome Dove: Series
USA
Gargoyles Sailor Moon
Webster!
Facts-Life
Strangers
Gimme B.
Movie: ★* “Bitter Vengeance” (1994, Suspense) BE Movie: ***V2 "Broadcast News" (1987, Comedy-Drama) William Hurt. (In Stereo)
Renegade "Thrill Kill" ®
DISN
Goof Troop
Mermaid
Pooh
Katie-Orbie
Bear
Wonderland I Chip-Pale | Madelines] Mermaid |Pooh
Jungle |Tale Spin BO [Donald
Chip-Pale [Tale Spin ® [Goof TroopT
Timon | Aladdin ®
HBO
Storyteller
Movie: ** "Plain Clothes" (1988) ‘PG’
Movie: **V2 "Some Kind of Wonderful” (1987) ‘PG-13’
Movie: ★** "Independence Day’’{1996) Will Smith. ‘PG-13’
Movie: "Witness to the Execution" (1994) “Man-Tomorrow'
Movie: **Vi2 "Mission: Impossible"(1996) Tom Cruise. [Movie: "GirlCrazy"(1994, Comedy) ‘NR’ [Movie: ★ “A Fine Mess"(1986) ‘PG’ ®
MAX
(6:45) Movie
Movie: *** 1 /2 “Roman Holiday"(1953) Gregory Peck. |Movie: **V2 "Tiger Heart”(1996)
SHO
(7:05) Movie |Movie: ‘‘The Lamp in Assassin Mews" {“Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles III" (1992) ★★ "The Christmas That Almost Wasn’t" |Movie: “Heck’s Way Home" (1995) |Movie: ★★* “Rapture” (1965, Drama) Melvyn Douglas. [ “Metropol
TMC 1(7:30) Movie: "Murder" |Movie: ★ “The Forbidden Dance"[ 1990) Laura Herring. (Movie: ★** “Flatliners”(1990) ‘RM
WEDNESDAY EVENING
I Movie: *** The Bible" (1966, Drama) George C. Scott. Peter O’Toole. (In Stereo) I Movie: *★* “A Perfect Couple" H 979t
NOVEMBER 5,1997
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5:00
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News
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Real TV (In
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Hollywood
Extra (In
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Party of Five “Positive
Attitude" (In Stereo) ®
News
Cheers (In
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Keenen Ivory Wayans (In
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M*A*S*H ®
Cosby
Show®
Who’s the
Boss? ®
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NBC
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News
NBC Nightly
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®
3rd Rock-
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Frasier “The
Gift Horse"
3rd Rock-
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Working (In
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“Nullification" (In Stereo)
News
Tonight Show (In Stereo)
®
Jenny Jones HIV-positive
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Paid
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O
ABC
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News
ABC Wld
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“Batmobile"
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| Journal ®
Politically
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CBC
Money
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Rez “Lust”
®
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Black Harbour “The Wall”
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Movie: *** "Madame Bovary” (1991, Drama) From
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©
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Full House
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Family
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Different
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®
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Harvey®
Roseanne
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| Mama’s
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LAPD: Life
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Highway
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Strange
I Universe
Movie: **'/2 "Eye of the 1
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©
UPN
Simpsons
(In Stereo)
Mr. Cooper
Living
Single ®
Home
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Frasier
“Flour Child”
Home
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Star Trek: Voyager “Year
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Sentinel “Fool Me Twice"
(In Stereo)®
To Be Announced
Fresh
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Star Trek: The Next
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Vibe
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With
©
PBS
Kratts’
Creatures
Science
Guy
Newshour With Jim
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Business
Report
Am.Blck-
Journal
Lewis & Clark: The Journey of the Corps of
Discovery The Lewis and Clark expedition ends. ®
Sharks - The Real Story
(In Stereo)
Being
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Lewis & Clark: The Journey of the Corps of
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©
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Grace
Under Fire
Mad About
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Seinfeld (In
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Mad About
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Hard Copy
®
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Murphy
Brown ®
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Game
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American Justice “Why O.J. Simpson Won” The O.J.
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Planet Groove
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Movie: *** "Bend of the River" (1952,
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DISC
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Wild Discovery: Giant
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Discover Magazine “Born
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Justice Files “Everyone's
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PBA Bowling: Ebonite Challenge. From
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MLB Players’ Choice Awards From Orlando, Fla.
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B3 -- Bikes, Blades &
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Triathlon: Ironman
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Carol
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Carol
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FSD
Hardcore Football
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Waltons "The Courtship”
Rescue 911 (In Stereo)!
Diagnosis Murder “A Very
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Pistons | NBA Basketball: Indiana Pacers at Detroit Pistons. (Live)
Hawaii Five-0 "Welcome
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700 Club
Three Stooges
Paid
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Paid
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FOX Sports News
FOX Sports News
NBA Basketball: Indiana Pacers at Detroit Pistons. (R)
LIFE
Golden
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Golden
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Supermar-
ket Sweep
Debt
Intimate Portrait “Grace
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Unsolved Mysteries (In
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Movie: "Murder of Innocence" (1993, Drama) A
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Homicide: Life on the
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Unsolved Mysteries (In
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Sisters “A Bolt From the
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NICK
You Afraid?
Rocko’s
Modern Life
Figure It
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Tiny Toon
Adventures
Doug (In
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Rugrats (In
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Hey Arnold!
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Happy Days
Wonder
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Bewitched
I Love Lucy
“Oil Wells"
Odd Couple
Taxi!
Newhart ®
Mary Tyler
Moore ®
Dick Van
Dyke
Bob
Newhart
Rhoda
SCIFI
Six Million Dollar Man
TBS
Saved by
the Bell ®
Twilight Z.
Twilight Z.
Time Trax (In Stereo)
Saved by
the Bell ®
Family
Matters [
Family
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Coach (In
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Seaquest DSV (In Stereo)|Forever Knight (In Stereo) |Sightings (In Stereo) ®
Coach (In
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NBA Basketball: Orlando Magic at Chicago Bulls. From United
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Time Trax (In Stereo) ® Seaquest DSV (In Stereo) [Forever Knight (In Stereo)
Inside the
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Movie: *Vi "Police Academy 4: Citizens
on Patrol" (1987) Steve Guttenberg.
Movie: ** "Life Stinks" (1991, Comedy)
Mel Brooks, Lesley Ann Warren.
TLC
Work in Progress
Hometime
Hometime
Home Again ]Home Again
Wonders |SeaTek(R) |Earth’s Fury (R)
[Electric Skies (R)
Wonders [SeaTek(R) [Earth’s Fury (R)
Electric Skies |
TNT
In the Heat of the Night
“The Last Round” ®
Kung Fu: The Legend
Continues “Citizen Caine"
USA
Saved by
Bell
DISN
Dinosaurs
HBO
(4:00) Movie
Lois & Clark: The New
Adventures of Superman
USA High
(In Stereo)
Baywatch “Hot Stuff” (R)
(In Stereo) ®
Highlander: The Series
“The Sea Witch”!
Movie: *** "The Outlaw Josey Wales" (1976, Western) Clint Eastwood, Chief Dan
George, Sondra Locke. A Confederate soldier vows to avenge his family’s murder.
Growing
Pains ®
Growing
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Walker, Texas Ranger
“The Avenger” (In Stereo)
Brotherly
Love®
Movie: ** "The Computer Wore Tennis
Shoes" (1995, Adventure) Kirk Cameron.
Movie: **'/2 "Some Kind of Wonderful” (1987) A shy
teen tries to win the most popular girl in school. 'PG-13'
Family
Video
Movie: **★ "For a Few Dollars More” (1965) Clint Eastwood. Two
gunmen form an uneasy alliance to hunt down an outlaw.
Movie: "Heartless" (1997, Mystery) Madchen Amick. A
transplant recipient begins dreaming about her donor.
Movie: ** “D.A.R.Y.L."(1985, Science
Fiction) Mary Beth Hurt. ‘PG’ ®
Silk Stalkings “Jasmine"
(R) (In Stereo)!
Movie: ★★V2 “Cloak and Dagger" (1984, Suspense) A
boy becomes involved in murder and espionage. ‘PG’
Movie: **★ "Independence Day” (1996, Science Fiction) Will Smith.
Survivors band together to repel an alien invasion. 'PG-13'!
Movie: "The Maker" (1997, Suspense)
Matthew Modine. (In Stereo) ‘R’ ®
Highlander: The Series
“Revenge Is Sweet” ®
Movie: **'/2 “The Mark of
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Autopsy 4: The Dead
Speak (R) (In Stereo)!
“The Good
Old Boys"
Big Easy “A Perfect Day
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Movie: ** "The Munsters’
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Movie: ** "One Man’s
Justice" (1995, Drama) ‘R’
MAX
Movie: ** "Little Nikita" (1988, Drama)
Sidney Poitier. (In Stereo) ‘PG’ ®
SHO
(4:30) Movie: ***
"Metropolitan" (1990)
Movie: **★ “Tantrums & Tiaras” (1995,
Documentary) (In Stereo) ‘NR’
Movie: “They Shoot Horses, Don’t They?"(1969) A
couple in need of money enter a dance marathon. ‘PG’
Movie: ** “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles III" (1992)
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Movie: *** “Grease" (1978) John Travolta. Disparate
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Movie: * “Fair Game" (1995, Suspense)
Cindy Crawford. (In Stereo) ‘R’ ®
Dead Man's
Gun
Fast Track The raceway
gets a bomb threat. (R) ®
Movie: -k-k'A "Whispers in the Dark"
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Holyfield
Movie: ** “Temptress"
(1995) Kim Delaney. 'R'
Movie: *’/2 “Carnosaur3:
Primal Species" (1996) ‘R’
Movie: ★* "Condition
Red” (1995) James Russo.
TMC
(3:40) Movie
Movie: ★V2 “Warhead" (1996,
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Movie: ★★V2 "Devil in a Blue Dress" (1995) A private
eye scours 1948 L.A. for a mysterious woman. ‘R’ [
Movie: ** 1 /2 “Kill Me Again" (1989,
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Movie: ***V2 “Body Heat" (1981, Suspense) A lawyer
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Page 20 - [see page image]
THURSDAY MORNING/AFTERNOON NOVEMBER 6,1997
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FOX
e
Eyewitness Morning
Geraldo Rivera BE
Home Team (In Stereo) BE
Boss? | Cosby
News
Pictionary
Hollywood |Extra®
Geraldo Rivera BE
Ricki Lake
Rosie O’Donnell ®
NBC
o
(7:00) Today (In Stereo) BE
Maury BE
Jerry Springer
Jenny Jones (In Stereo)
News
Jeopardy!
Days of Our Lives BE
Another World BE
Sally ®
Montel Williams ®
ABC
o
Good Morning America
Regis & Kathie
Martha
Gayle King
People’s Court (In Stereo)
News
Pt. Charles
All My Children ®
One Life to Live ®
General Hos
jital ®
Oprah Winfrey BE
CBC
o
(7:00) CBC Morning News
Playground |SesamePk
Theodore
Mr. Dressup
Wimzie |Lead®
Midday ®
Encore to Pamela Wallin
E.N.G
Coronat’n
Urban P.
Jonovision
The Bill
WB
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Mask
Garfield
Medicine Woman
700 Club
In the Heat of the Night
Honeymnr
Hillbillies
Hawaii Five-0
Bananas
X-Men ®
BugsDaffy
Animaniacs
PinkyBrain
Batman
upTT
SD
Wacky
Bobby
Casper BE | Dinosaurs
Step-Step
Blossom BE
Sunset Beach ®
All-Family
Jeffersons
Sanford | Good Times
Spider-Man
Metallix
Rangers
Goosebmp
Breaker
Sw. Valley
PBS
©
Groundling
Puzzle
Sesame Street (In Stereo)
Barney
Mr Rogers
Storytime | Reading
Arthur BE
Tots TV ®
Sesame Street (In Stereo)
Barney
Couch
Arthur BE
Magic Bus
Sandiego
Wishbone
CBS
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Quincy
Guiding Light (In Stereo)
Price Is Right ®
Murphy
Young and the Restless | Bold & B.
As the World Turns®
Judge Judy
Judge Judy
Newlywed
Dating
A&E
Columbo “Any Old Port in a Storm" | Cosby Mysteries
Quincy |Northern Exposure®
Law & Order® |Columbo“AnyOldPortinaStorm" |Cosby Mysteries
AMC
(7:45) Movie: “Private War" |Movie: ★★’/!2 “Kidnapped"(1948)
Movie: ★★ “My Friend Irma" (1949) Marie Wilson.
Movie: -k-kVi "Interlude" (1957, Drama)
★'/2 “The Lawless Frontier"|Movie: ★★★ “Paris Holiday” (1958)
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Rap City
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Interior Motives
Home Matters
Housesmart! (R) |Interior Motives
Great Chefs
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ESPN
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Sportscenter (R)
Sportscenter (R)
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Skiing (R)
Senior PGA Golf: Energizer Senior Tour - First Round.
PGA Golf (Live)
FAM
Rescue 911 (In Stereo) BE
Waltons “The Pin-Up"
700 Club | Fit TV
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ShopDrop [Shopping
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FSD
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Paid Prog. |NBA Basketball: Indiana Pacers at Detroit Pistons. (R)
Golf: World Open Championship - First Round
To Be Announced
Motorsports Hour (R)
Cycle World (R)
LIFE
Baby
Kids These
Sisters (In Stereo) BE
Designing
Almost
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Ingredient
Handmade
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Movie: “For Their Own Good” (1993, Drama)
Night Court
Night Court
NICK
Looney
Rugrats BE
Little Bear |BluesClues
Busy World
Muppets
Wubbulous |Gullah
Little Bear
BluesClues
Allegra
Rupert
Muppets
Looney
Beetlejuice
Gadget
Tiny Toon
Garfield
SCIFI
incredible Hulk
Lost in Space
Time Tunnel
Mann & Machine
Ripley’s Believe It or Not
Mysteries
Monsters
Gallery
Bradbury
Beyond
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Journey Inside
TBS
Brady
Amen
Little House
Mama
Mama
Griffith
Griffith
Matlock “The Nightmare"
Movie: ★★’/2 “Midway" (1976, Drama) Charlton Heston.
Flintstones
Flintstones
Looney
Dreams
TLC
Rorys Pice
Critters
Big Garage
Bingo
Pappyland
Gnomes
Rorys Pice
Skinnmrk
Kerr’s ICucina
Great Inns jlnntimate |Onlnside ^Onlnside
Wedding
Wedding
Great Inns
Inntimate
TNT
Scooby Dooby Doo
Flintstones
Flintstones
Gilligan
Gilligan
Spenser: For Hire
Movie: ★★★ “The Outlaw Josey Wales" (1976, Western) Clint Eastwood.
Hondo “The War Hawks"
Lonesome Dove: Series
USA
Gargoyles
Sailor Moon
Webster BE
Facts-Life
Strangers
Gimme B.
Wings SB
Movie: *V2 “Shout” (1991, Drama) John Travolta.
Movie: ★*% "Ladyhawke" (1985, Fantasy) Matthew Broderick.
Renegade “Teen Angel”
DISN
Goof Troop
Mermaid
Pooh
Katie-Orbie
Bear
Wonderland
Chip-Dale
Madeline® |Mermaid |Pooh |Jungle
Tale Spin ® [Donald |Chip-Dale
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HBO
Movie: ★★ “Last of the Dogmen” (1995) 'PG' BE
Movie: ★★★ “Lucas" (1986) Corey Haim.
Movie: ★ "Teen Wolf Too” (1987) Jason Bateman. 'PG'
Movie: ★★★ “Airplane!" (1980) ‘PG’ ®
Movie: ★★★VI2 “Sense and Sensibility" (1995) ‘PG’ BE
MAX
(7:30) Movie: “The Detective" (1958) |Movie: ★★’/2 “Chances Are"(1989) Cybill Shepherd. BE
Movie: ★★'/2 “Helen of Troy" (1955, Adventure) BE
Movie: ★★★ “Roxanne" (1987) 'PG' BE
Movie: ★★ “Eye of the Wolf" (1995) Jeff Fahey. ‘PG-13’
SHO
(7:25) Movie: "Jack-Kiiler" |Movie: ★★ "Ruby Jean and Joe" (1996) Tom Selleck. | Movie: ★ * W “Little Heroes" (1991) ‘G’ |Movie: “The Day the Earth Stood Still" |Movie: ★★★ “Dark Eyes" (1987) Marcello Mastroianni. \ "Prisoner of Zenda, Inc."
TMC
(6:15) Movie: ★★% "Nixon” (1995) ’R’ BE |Movie: V2 “True Grit" (1969) John Wayne. ‘G’ BE I Movie: *★★ "Our Man Flint” (1966) James Coburn. I Movie: ★% “Summer Camp" (1994) ‘PG’ | Movie: ★% "Spill" (1996) ‘PG-13’ I "Foreign"
THURSDAY EVENING NOVEMBER 6, 1997
5:00
5:30
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©
FOX
News
News
Real TV (In
Stereo) BE
Access
Hollywood
Extra (In
Stereo) BE
Living
Single SB
Between
Brothers BE
Cheating Death-Caught
on Tape
News
Cheers (In
Stereo) SB
Keenen Ivory Wayans (In
Stereo)
M*A*S‘H ffi
Cosby
Show®
Who’s the
Boss? ffi
o
NBC
News
News
NBC Nightly
News BE
Wheel of
Fortune BE
Jeopardy!
BE
Friends (In
Stereo) BE
Union
Square ®
Seinfeld (In
Stereo) ®
Veronica’s
Closet ®
ER “Ground Zero" (In
Stereo) ®
News
Tonight Show (In Stereo)
BE
Jenny Jones Paternity
results are revealed. BE
Paid
Program
o
ABC
News
News
ABC Wld
News
Ent. Tonight
Nothing Sacred “Calling”
(In Stereo) BE
Cracker “Sons and
Lovers” (In Stereo) BE
20/20®
News
Nightline BE
Inside
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American
Journal ®
Politically
Incorrect BE
Arthel &
Fred
o
CBC
Futureworld
BE
News BE
CBC News
Man Alive
BE
Health
Show®
Witness “The Shadow of
the Volcano” BE
North of 60 Teevee faces
his first challenge as chief.
National/CBC News BE
National
Update ®
News ®
Movie: "Impolite" (1992) Robert Wisden. A blood
stained diary may save an almost washed-up reporter.
©
WB
Full House
“The Test”
Boy Meets
World BE
Family
Matters BE
Different
World BE
Roseanne
(In Stereo)
Mama’s
Family
Movie: ★★ “Ernest Goes to Jail" (1990) A criminal
mastermind changes places with his bumbling twin.
Roseanne
(In Stereo)
Mama’s
Family
Cops (In
Stereo) BE
LAPD: Life
on the Beat
Highway
Patrol
Strange
Universe
Movie: ★★'A “Stanley &
Iris" (1990) Jane Fonda. Im
©
UPN
Simpsons
(In Stereo)
Mr. Cooper
Living
Single BE
Home
Improve.
Frasier (In
Stereo) BE
Home
Improve.
Star Trek: Deep Space
Nine (In Stereo) BE
Sentinel “Fool Me Twice"
(In Stereo) BE
News
Fresh
Prince
Star Trek: The Next
Generation (In Stereo) BE
Vibe
Married...
With
©
PBS
Kratts’
Creatures
Science
Guy
Newshour With Jim
Lehrer BE
Business
Report
Great Lakes
Outdoors
New Yankee
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This Old
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Practical
Sports
Backstage
Pass
Mystery! "Deep Secrets" (In Stereo) BE
New Red
Green SB
New Yankee
Workshop
This Old
House ®
practical
Sports
Backstage
Pass (R)
©
CBS
Grace
Under Fire
Mad About
You BE
Seinfeld (In Mad About
Stereo) BE You BE
CBS News
Hard Copy
BE
Promised Land “Take
Back the Night” (In Stereo)
Diagnosis Murder “Must
Kill TV” (In Stereo) ®
48 Hours (In Stereo) ®
Late Show (In Stereo) BE
Hard Copy
BE
Late Late Show (In
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Newlywed
Game
A&E
Quincy “Promises to
Keep"
Northern Exposure “Get
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Law & Order “The
Serpent’s Tooth” BE
Biography: The
Menendez Brothers
Sea Tales “The Secret of
the U-110”
Unexplained “UFOs vs.
the Government" (R)
Law & Order "Heaven” ®
Biography: The
Menendez Brothers
Sea Tales "The Secret of
the U-110” (R)
AMC
Movie: ★★★ “The Hasty Heart" (1950) Ronald Reagan.
A dying soldier finds peace in a military hospital.
Movie: ★★★ "Duel in the Sun” (1946) Jennifer Jones. A
half-American Indian moves in with a rancher's family.
Movie: ★★ “Ensign Pulver" (1964) Robert Walker Jr.. A
mischievous ensign plots against his tyrannical captain.
Movie: ★★★Vi "Spellbound" (1945) A sympathetic
psychiatrist helps a troubled amnesia victim.
Movie: ★★★ “Duel in the
Sun” (1946, Western)
BET
(4:30) Rap City |227 BE
Planet Groove
Hit List
Comicview
BET Tonight
227® |Midnight Love
DISC
Travelers “Los Angeles"
(R)
Strange Planes "Drones,
Mutants and Midgets" (R)
Gimme Shelter (R)
Wild Discovery “Hyenas
-- Nature’s Gangsters" (R)
Into the
Unknown
Movie
Magic (R)
Wings “Nighthawk --
Secrets of the Stealth" (R)
Justice Files “Getting
Away With Murder” (R)
Wild Discovery "Hyenas
- Nature's Gangsters” (R)
Into the
Unknown
Movie
Magic (R)
ESPN
(4:00) PGA Golf: Kapalua
International -- First Round.
Up Close
Sportscenter
Wkend
Kickoff
College Football: Arkansas at Mississippi. (Live) ®
Sportscenter ®
Billiards: Ultimate Nine-
Ball Challenge. (R)
Extreme
Bloopers
Golf Hawaii
FAM
Bonanza: The Lost
Episodes “The Wagon"
Carol
Burnett
Carol
Burnett
Waltons “The Gypsies”
Rescue 911 (In Stereo) BE
Movie: “Terror on Track 9" (1992) Richard Crenna. A
detective investigates murders by lethal injection.
700 Club
Three Stooges
Paid
Program
Paid
Program
FSD
This Week in NASCAR
NBA Action
Sports
CART IlHL Hockey: Cincinnati Cyclones at Detroit Vipers. ISports
FOX Sports News
Football |Auto Racing: World of Outlaws.
LIFE
Golden
Girls BE
Golden
Girls BE
Supermar
ket Sweep
Debt
Intimate Portrait "Tanya
Tucker” (R) (In Stereo) BE
Unsolved Mysteries (In
Stereo)
Movie: “In the Shadow of Evil" (1995, Suspense) A cop
loses his memory while investigating serial murders.
Homicide: Life on the
Street (In Stereo) ®
Unsolved Mysteries (In
Stereo)
Sisters “Best Intentions" I
(In Stereo) ®
NICK
You Afraid?
Rocko’s
Modern Life
Figure It
Out
Tiny Toon
Adventures
Doug (In
Stereo) BE
Rugrats (In
Stereo) BE
Secret of
Alex
Happy Days
Wonder
Years ®
Bewitched
I Love Lucy
®
Odd Couple
®
Taxi “Tony’s
Baby" BE
Newhart
"The Fan"
Mary Tyler
Moore SB
Dick Van
Dyke
Bob
Newhart
Rhoda
SCIFI
Six Million Dollar Man
Twilight Z.
Twilight Z.
Starship
Amazing
Seaquest DSV (In Stereo)
Forever Knight (In Stereo)
VR.5
Starship
Amazing
Seaquest DSV (In Stereo)
Forever Knight (In Stereo) |
TBS
Saved by
the Bell BE
Saved by
the Bell BE
Family
Matters BE
Family
Matters BE
Coach (In
Stereo) BE
Coach (In
Stereo) ®
Movie: ★* “Ernest Goes to Jail” (1990) A criminal
mastermind changes places with his bumbling twin.
Movie: ★★ "Ernest Scared Stupid” (1991) Jim Varney.
Ernest unleashes an evil troll from its ancient tomb.
Movie: ** "Caveman"(1981, Comedy) Ringo Starr. A 1
Neanderthal misfit leaves his tribe and learns to think. |
TLC
Work in Progress
Hometime
Hometime
Home Again
Home Again
Medical IWarning lEarth’s Fury (R)
Heaven’s Breath (R)
Medical |Warning
Earth’s Fury (R)
Heaven’s Breath (R)
TNT
In the Heat of the Night
“Dangerous Engagement”
Kung Fu: The Legend
Continues “Quake” (R)
Lois & Clark: The New
Adventures of Superman
Movie: ★★V2 “Tightrope" (1984, Suspense) Clint Eastwood. A cop
pursues a psychopath in New Orleans' French Quarter.
Rough Cut
(In Stereo)
Eastwood on Eastwood The career of
actor-director Clint Eastwood. (In Stereo)
Rough Cut
(In Stereo)
Movie: ★★★ “Midnight
Express" (1978, Drama)
USA
Saved by
Bell
USA High
(In Stereo)
Baywatch "Surf’s Up" (R)
(In Stereo) BE
Highlander: The Series
"Revenge Is Sweet" SB
Walker, Texas Ranger
“Hall of Fame” (In Stereo)
Movie: ★★ "Shattered Image" (1994) Bo Derek. A
former model and her lover plot to kidnap her husband.
Silk Stalkings “Night
Games” (R) (In Stereo) ®
Highlander: The Series
“See No Evil" (In Stereo)
La Femme Nikita
"Treason" (In Stereo) ffi
DISN
Dinosaurs
BE
Growing
Pains BE
Growing
Pains BE
Brotherly
Love BE
Movie: “Under Wraps" (1997, Adventure)
Adam Wylie, Mario Yedidia. BE
Movie: “Escape to Witch Mountain"
(1995, Adventure) Erik von Detten. ®
Movie: ★★'/;2 “Labyrinth" (1986) David Bowie. A girl's
wish sends her baby brother to a world of fairies. ‘PG’
Movie: “Under Wraps" (1997, Adventure)
Adam Wylie, Mario Yedidia. ®
"Once- I
Grimm"
HBO
(3:00) Movie
Tracey
Takes On...
Movie: ★★ “Last of the Dogmen" (1995) A modern-day
tracker finds a long-lost band of Cheyenne. ‘PG’ BE
Where Have You Gone,
Joe DiMaggio? (In Stereo)
Movie: ★★’/2 “Gotti" (1996) Armand Assante. Based on
the career and downfall of mobster John Gotti. ‘R’ ®
Inside the NFL (In Stereo)
BE
Arliss (In
Stereo) ®
Movie: ★★★ “Open Season" (1995,
Comedy) Robert Wuhl. (In Stereo) ‘R’ ® |
MAX
Movie: ★★ “Who's Harry Crumb?" (1989,
[Comedy) John Candy. 'PG-13' BE
Movie: ★★ “Back to the Beach" (1987,
Comedy) Frankie Avalon. ‘PG’ BE
Diving Bell
Movie: *★ “The Great White Hype”
(1996, Comedy) Samuel L. Jackson. 'R'
Movie: ★'/2 “Crimetime" (1996) Stephen Baldwin. An
Iactor becomes immersed in his TV portrayal of a killer.
Movie: *★ “2 Days in the Valley" (1996) Danny Aiello. 1
A hit man takes an art dealer and his assistant hostage. |
SHO
(4:00) Movie
Movie: ★★ "Ruby Jean and Joe” (1996) Tom Selleck. A
fading rodeo star and a hitchhiker forge a relationship.
I On the Set:
Star
Movie: ★★ “Sunset Park" (1996,
Comedy-Drama) Rhea Perlman. ‘R’ BE
I Movie: "Joe Torre: Curveballs Along the
Way" (1997, Drama) Paul Sorvino.
Holyfield
Movie: ★★★ 1 /2 “Lone Sfar”(1996, Drama) Chris Cooper. Long-buried I
secrets surface during a murder investigation. (In Stereo) ‘R’
TMC
(4:40) Movie: ★★ 1 /2 “Foreign Body"
(1986, Comedy) Victor Banerjee. ‘PG-13’
Movie: ★*★ "Rob Roy’’(1995, Drama) Liam Neeson. An honor-
bound Scotsman becomes the victim of a manhunt. (In Stereo) ‘R’
Movie: ★★★ “Land and Freedom" (1995) A Liverpool
Communist takes part in the Spanish Civil War. 'NR' ®
Movie: ★V2 “Space Marines" (1996,
Science Fiction) Billy Wirth. ‘R’
Movie: ★★V2 "Tiger Heart" (1996,
Adventure) T.J. Roberts. ‘PG-13’ ®
U.A.W. LOCAL 160
MEMBERSHIP, LEADERSHIP AND
RETIREE CHAPTER WILL
CONTINUE TO SUPPORT THE A
NEWSPAPER WORKERS IN THEIR M
STRUGGLE THROUGH ACTION ™
AND $$$ UNTIL IUSTICF. IS SERVED! t
i
IN SOLIDARITY • UN
UAW LOCAL
387
Members and Officers
Support Locked-Out
Newspaper Workers
Jim Hall, President
U.A.W. LOCAL 36
WIXOM, MICHIGAN
' MEMBERSHIP LEADERSHIP AND
h RETIREE WILL CONTINUE TO
SUPPORT THE NEWSPAPER
WORKERS AND THE
SUNDAY JOURNAL
JUSTICE, DIGNITY AND RESPECT
'The Membership of Local 9231 s
New Carlisle Indiana
Fully Support The Newspaper
^Workers in their Labor Dispute^
Page 21 - [see page image]
FRIDAY MORNING/AFTERNOON r NOVEMBER 7,1997
8:00
8:30
9:00
9:30
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1:00
1:30
2:00
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3:00
3:30
4:00 |
4:30 |
FOX
0
(6:00) News
Geraldo Rivera SB
Home Team (In Stereo) SB
Boss? |Cosby
News
Pictionary
Hollywood | Extra SB
Geraldo Rivera SB
Ricki Lake
Rosie O’Donnell ®
NBC
O
(7:00) Today (In Stereo) SB
Maury SB
Jerry Springer
Jenny Jones (In Stereo)
News
Jeopardy!
Days of Our Lives SB
Another World SB
Sally ®
Montel Williams ®
ABC
o
Good Morning America
Regis & Kathie
Martha
Gayle King
People’s Court (In Stereo)
News
Pt. Charles
All My Children SB
One Life to Live BE
General Hosf
>ital ®
Oprah Winfrey ®
CBC
o
(7:00) CBC Morning News
Playground |SesamePk
Skinnmrk
Mr. Dressup
Wimzie | Lead SB
Midday SB
Encore to Pamela Wallin
E.N.G
Reflections
Urban P.
Cents
The Bill
WB
GD
Mask
Garfield
Medicine Woman
700 Club
In the Heat of the Night
Honeymnr
Hillbillies
Hawaii Five-0
Bananas
X-Men SB
BugsDaffy
Animaniacs
PinkyBrain
Batman
UPN
€0
Wacky
C-Bear
Casper SB |Dinosaurs
Step-Step
Blossom SB
Sunset Beach SB
All-Family
Jeffersons
Sanford |Good Times
Spider-Man
Metallix
Rangers
Turtles
Breaker
Sw. Valley
PBS
©
Wimzies
Puzzle
Sesame Street (In Stereo)
Barney
Mr Rogers
Storytime | Reading
Station
Theodore
Sesame Street (In Stereo)
Barney
Couch
Arthur®
Magic Bus
Sandiego
Wishbone
CBS
©
(7:00) This Morning SB
Quincy “Dark Angel"
Guiding Light (In Stereo)
Price Is Right SB
Murphy
Young and the Restless | Bold & B.
As the World Turns®
Judge Judy
Judge Judy
Newlywed
Dating
A&E
McMillan and Wife “Secrets for Sale" |Equalizer “Lady Cop" |Quincy “Semper Fidelis"
Northern Exposure SB |Law & Order SB |McMillan and Wife “Secrets for Sale" | Equalizer “Lady Cop"
AMC
Movie: *★* “Duel in the Sun"(1946, Western) Jennifer Jones. [Movie: **V2 “Tanganyika"(1954)
Movie: "The Spiral Staircase" (1946) |Movie:** “Ensign Pulver" (1964) |Movie:**’/2 "Jivaro" (1954) Fernando Lamas.
BET
Brkthrgh
Eddie Long
Video Vibrations
Jam Zone
Jam Zone | Planet Groove (R)
Rap City j
DISC
Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
Assignment Discovery
Home Matters
Housesmart! (R)
Interior Motives
Home Matters
Housesmart! (R)
Interior Motives |Great Chefs |
Great Chefs |
ESPN
Sportscenter (R)
Sportscenter (R)
Sportscenter (R)
Sportscenter (R)
Sportscenter (R)
Bodybuild. | Billiards (R) | PGA Golf
Senior PGA Golf: Energizer Senior Tour
FAM
Rescue 911 (In Stereo) SB
Waltons “The Attack"
700 Club I Fit TV
Diagnosis Murder SB
Home & Family (In Stereo)
ShopDrop
Shopping
Big Valley “Target"
FSD
FOX Sports News (R)
IHL Hockey: Cincinnati Cyclones at Detroit Vipers. (R)
Golf: World Open Championship - Second Round
To Be Announced
NBA Action
NFL Access
Hardcore Football (R)
LIFE
Baby
Kids These
Sisters “Broken Angel" OS
Designing
Almost
Our Home (In Stereo)
Ingredient
Handmade
Commish (In Stereo) El
Movie: "Lady Killer" [1995, Suspense) Judith Light.
Night Court
Night Court 1
NICK
Looney
Rugrats SB
Little Bear |BluesClues
Busy World
Muppets
Wubbulous jGullah
Little Bear
BluesClues
Allegra
Rupert
Muppets
Looney
Beetlejuice
Gadget
Tiny Toon
Garfield f
SCIFI
Incredible Hulk
Lost in Space
Time Tunnel
Mann & Machine
Ripley’s Believe It or Not
Mysteries
Monsters
Gallery
In Space
Sci-Fi Buzz
Genesis
“Creature-Among Us" ]
TBS
Brady
Amen
Little House
Mama
Mama
Griffith | Griffith
Matlock (In Stereo) SB
Movie: **’/2 "Fireball Forward" (1972) Ben Gazzara.
Flintstones
Flintstones
Looney
Dreams
TLC
Rorys Pice
Critters
Big Garage
Bingo
Pappyland
Gnomes
Elementary School (R)
Kerr’s ICucina
Great Inns |lnntimate |Onlnside (Onlnside
Wedding
Wedding
Great Inns
Inntimate [
TNT
Scooby Dooby Doo
Flintstones
Flintstones
Gilligan
Gilligan
Spenser: For Hire
Movie: **'/2 “Wild Times” (1980, Western) Sam Elliott, Ben Johnson.
Lonesome Dove: Series 1
USA
Gargoyles
Sailor Moon
Webster SB
Facts-Life
Strangers
Gimme B.
Wings S3
Wings SB
Movie: ** “Shattered Image" (1994) Bo Derek. SB
Movie: * 1 /j “Hello Again" (1987) Shelley Long. SB
Renegade (In Stereo) ® |
DISN
Goof Troop
Mermaid
Pooh
Katie-Orbie
Bear
Wonderland
Chip-Dale
Madeline SB
Mermaid I Pooh
Jungle
Tale Spin SB
Donald |Chip-Dale
Tale Spin ® |Goof Troop
Timon
Aladdin ® 1
HBO
Movie: “Once in a Blue Moon" (1995)
Movie: *** “The Big Picture" (1989) Kevin Bacon. SB
Movie: “Playing Dangerous” (1995)
Phantom
Movie: ** “Bushwhacked" (1995) ‘PG’
Movie: ** “CarpooT’{1996) Tom Arnold. |
Storyteller |
MAX
Movie: “Murder in Mississippi" (1990)
Movie: “It Ain’t Love" (1997) 'NR' SB |Movie: "The War Between the Tates" |Movie: *- * V2 “Legends of the North" (1995) ‘PG’ SB |Movie: *** "Indian Summer" (1993) SB |Movie: "Lionheart" (1987) |
SHO
(7:25) Movie: "All Dogs 2" (Movie: “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” (1986) | “Sentenced for Life" (1960) | Movie: **** "Gandhi" (1982, Biography) Ben Kingsley. (In Stereo) 'PG' (Violence) |Movie: “All Dogs Go to Heaven 2" (1996) \“LegndGatr" 1
TMC
(6:55) Movie | Movie: ***'/2 "The Guns of Navarone" (1961) Gregory Peck. 32 |Movie: *** “The Little Shop of Horrors" |Movie: ** "High-Ballin’" (1978) 'PG' |Movie: “Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry" (1974) |Movie: **'/2 “Wait Until Spring, Bandini" \
| FRIDAY EVENING NOVEMBER 7,1997 |
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 |
0
FOX
News
News
Real TV (In
Stereo) SB
Access
Hollywood
Extra (In
Stereo) SB
Visitor “Reunion" (In
Stereo) SB
Millennium “19:19” (In
Stereo) (PA) SB
News
Cheers (In
Stereo) BE
Keenen Ivory Wayans (In
Stereo)
M*A‘S*H ®
Cosby
Show®
Kwik Witz
o
NBC
News
News
NBC Nightly
News SB
Wheel of
Fortune SB
Jeopardy!
SB
Players “Con Artist" (In
Stereo) SB
Dateline (In Stereo) SB
Homicide: Life on the
Street “Birthday" SB
News
Tonight Show Music
guest Shania Twain. BE
Jenny Jones Teens want
to be exotic dancers. ®
Paid
Program
o
ABC
News
News
ABC Wld
News
Ent. Tonight
Sabrina-
Witch
Boy Meets
World SB
You Wish
(In Stereo)
Teen Angel
(In Stereo)
20/20 SB
News
Nightline SB
Inside
Edition ®
American
Journal ®
Politically
Incorrect ®
Arthel &
Fred
o
CBC
Fashion File
SB
News SB
CBC News
On the
Road Again
New Red
Green Show
Royal Air
Farce
22 Minutes
Traders “Pledge of
Allegiance” (In Stereo) El
National/CBC News El
National
Update SB
News®
Stopwatch
(Off Air) ‘
©
WB
Full House
SB
Boy Meets
World SB
Family
Matters SB
Different
World SB
Roseanne
(In Stereo)
Mama’s
Family
Movie: **V2 “Out for Justice" (1991, Drama) A New
York cop relentlessly pursues a comrade's murderer.
Roseanne
(In Stereo)
Mama’s
Family
Cops (In
Stereo) BE
LAPD: Life
on the Beat
Highway
Patrol
Strange
Universe
Movie: ** “Her Alibi" :
(1989) Tom Selleck.
©
UPN
Simpsons
(In Stereo)
Mr. Cooper
Living
Single SB
Home
Improve.
Frasier (In
Stereo) SB
Home
Improve.
Movie
News
Fresh
Prince
Star Trek: Deep Space
Nine “Favor the Bold" ®
Vibe
Married...
With i
©
PBS
Kratts’
Creatures
Science
Guy
Newshour With Jim
Lehrer SB
Business
Report
Follow the
Money SB
Washington
Week
Wall Street
Week
Movie: **** "Casablanca" (1942, Drama) Nazis,
intrigue and romance clash at a Moroccan nightclub.
Being
Served
Thin Blue
Line
To Be Announced
Movie: ★***
“Casablanca" (1942) ;
©
CBS
Grace
Under Fire
Mad About
You SB
Seinfeld (In Mad About
Stereo) SB You SB
CBS News
Hard Copy
SB
Candid Camera's Battle
of the Sexes (In Stereo) SB
Family
Matters SB
Step by
Step SB
Nash Bridges
“Revelations" (in Stereo)
Late Show (In Stereo) SB
Hard Copy
BE
Late Late Show (In
Stereo) ®
Newlywed I
Game
A&E
Quincy “Semper Fidelis"
Northern Exposure
“Dateline: Cicely" SB
Law & Order “Second
Opinion" SB
Biography: Fred
MacMurray
America’s Castles “The
Castles of Charleston" (R)
Grand Tour “The Imperial
Hotels of Vienna"
Law & Order
“Renunciation" BE
Biography: Fred
MacMurray
America’s Castles “The 1
Castles of Charleston” (R) 1
AMC
Movie: **'/2 “The Family Jewels" (1965,
Comedy) Jerry Lewis, Sebastian Cabot.
Movie: **** “The Pride of the Yankees" (1942, Biography) Gary
Cooper. The story of ill-fated baseball great Lou Gehrig.
Movie: *** “Daddy Long Legs” (1955) Fred Astaire. A
playboy falls in love with the orphan he sent to college.
Movie: ** 1 /2 “The Mad Magician" (1954,
Horror) Vincent Price, Eva Gabor.
Movie: **** “The Pride of the
Yankees" (1942) Gary Cooper. I
BET
(4:30) Rap City
227 SB
Planet Groove Top Twenty
Hit List
Comicview
Rap City Top 10
227®
Midnight Love
DISC
Travelers “Seattle" (R)
Wings "Harrier" (R)
Gimme Shelter (R)
Wild Discovery (R)
Discovery
News
Storm
Warning!
Fangs! “Rivers of Life,
Rivers of Death" (R)
Justice Files “Love and
Death" (R)
Wild Discovery (R)
Discovery
News (R)
Storm
Warning!
ESPN
Inside Sr.
PGA
Inside the
PGA Tour
Up Close
Sportscenter
PGA Golf: Kapalua International --
Second Round. (Live)
Boxing: Jorge Luis Gonzalez vs. Michael Grant. (Live)
SB
Sportscenter SB
Strongest
Man
Strongest
Man
American
Muscle
Wheelchair
Sports
FAM
Bonanza: The Lost
Episodes
Country Music Hall of Fame 25th Anniversary
Celebration
Ed Sullivan All-Star Comedy (R)
Hawaii Five-0 “Bones of
Contention” SB
700 Club
Three Stooges
Paid
Program
Paid
Program
FSD
Football
Big 12
Football
Sports
Red Wings [NHL Hockey: Pittsburgh Penguins at Detroit Red Wings. (Live) I Sports
FOX Sports News
NHL Hockey: Penguins at Red Wings
LIFE
Golden
Girls SB
Golden
Girls SB
Supermar
ket Sweep
Debt
Intimate Portrait "Sarah
Brady” (In Stereo) SB
Unsolved Mysteries (In
Stereo)
Movie: “Moment of Truth: Cradle of Conspiracy" (1994,
Drama) Danica McKellar, Dee Wallace Stone.
Homicide: Life on the
Street (In Stereo) BE
Place (In Stereo)
Place (In Stereo)
NICK
You Afraid?
Rocko’s
Modern Life
Figure It
Out
Tiny Toon
Adventures
Doug (In
: Stereo) SB
Rugrats (In
Stereo) SB
Kablam! (In
Stereo)
Happy Days
Wonder
Years SB
Bewitched
I Love Lucy
SB
Odd Couple
Bl
Taxi “Jim’s
Mario's" SB
Newhart ®
Mary Tyler
Moore ®
Dick Van
Dyke
Bob
Newhart
jRhoda
SCIFI
(4:00) Movie
“Creature"
Starship
Swamp
Night Stalker “Vampire"
Movie: *V4 “Puppet Master II" (1990, Horror)
Fri. the 13th Series
Night Stalker “Vampire"
Movie: -kVi "Puppet Master II" (1990, Horror)
TBS
Saved by
the Bell SB
Saved by
the Bell SB
Family
Matters SB
Family
Matters SB
Coach “19
Candles” SB
Coach SB
Movie: ** “Medicine Man" (1992) Sean Connery. A
colleague disrupts a researcher's work in the Amazon.
Movie: *** "Rocky III" (1982, Drama) Sylvester Stallone, Burgess
Meredith. A merciless contender forces Rocky into a title match.
Movie: *** “Twilight Zone: The Movie" 1
(1983, Fantasy) John Lithgow. ;
TLC
Work in Proc
ress
Hometime
Hometime
Home Again
Home Again
Real America: 48 Hours lEarth’s Fury (R)
Heaven's Breath | Real America: 48 Hours | Earth’s Fury (R)
Heaven’s Breath
TNT
In the Heat of the Night
“A Problem Too Personal”
Kung Fu: The Legend
Continues (R)
Lois & Clark: The New
Adventures of Superman
NBA Basketball: Orlando Magic at Detroit Pistons. From the Palace
of Auburn Hills. (In StereoLive) SB
NBA Basketball: New York Knicks at Los Angeles Lakers. From the
Great Western Forum. (In StereoLive) S3
Inside the
NBA
“Police. i
I Center." I
USA
Saved by
Bell
USA High
(In Stereo)
Baywatch “Leap of Faith"
(R) (In Stereo) SB
Highlander: The Series
"See No Evil" (In Stereo)
Walker, Texas Ranger
“Ghost Rider” (In Stereo)
Movie: **V!2 “The Professional" (1994, Drama) Jean
Reno. A hit man takes an orphan girl under his wing. SB
Movie: ** "Scorned" (1994) Andrew Stevens. A
woman seeks revenge on the man who ruined her life.
Movie: ** “Last Call" ?
(1990) William Katt. ?
DISN
Dinosaurs
SB
Growing
Pains SB
Growing
Pains SB
Brotherly
Love SB
Movie: **'/2 "D3: The Mighty Ducks"
(1996, Comedy) Emilio Estevez. ‘PG’ SB
Movie: “Family Reunion: A Relative Nightmare" (1995,
jComedy) Melissa Joan Hart, Jason Marsden. SB
Movie: ★* "Brewster’s Millions” (1985,
Comedy) Richard Pryor. ‘PG’ SB
Movie: ***'/2 “Close Encounters of the Third Kind - 1
The Special Edition" (1980) Richard Dreyfuss. ‘PG’ BE 1
HBO
Movie: ★★V2
purple-clad a
“The Phantom" (1996) Billy Zane. A
/enqer must thwart a criminal’s evil plans.
Inside the NFL (R) (In
Stereo) SB
Movie: ** “Space Jam" (1996, Fantasy)
Michael Jordan. (In Stereo) 'PG' SB
Tales From
the Crypt SB
Movie: “The Night Flier" (1997, Horror)
Miguel Ferrer. (In Stereo) ‘R’ SB
Chris Rock
Salt-N-Pepa.
Mr. Show
With
Movie: -k'/i "The Surgeon"(1995,
Horror) Isabel Glasser. (In Stereo) ‘R’
MAX
(4:15) Movie: ★★V2
“Lionheart"( 1987) ‘PG’ SB
Movie: *** “Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country"
(1991, Science Fiction) William Shatner. 'PG' SB
Movie: *'/2 "Thinner"(1996, Suspense) A lawyer's
body begins wasting away under a Gypsy’s curse. 'R'
Movie: *'/2 “Money Train" (1995) Wesley Snipes. A
I transit cop’s foster brother plans a subway robbery. ‘R’
Inside Out
Movie: “Lady Chatterley’s Passions 2:
Julie’s Secret" (1995, Adult) ‘R’
SHO
(4:30) Movie: "The Legend
of Gator Face" (1996) ‘PG’
Movie: **!/2 “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off" (1986) A brash
teen plays hooky and borrows a vintage Ferrari. ‘PG-13’
Movie: ** “If Lucy Fell" (1996, Comedy)
Sarah Jessica Parker. (In Stereo) ‘R’ SB
I On the Set:
Star
Stargate SG-1 The SG-2
leader runs amok. (R) SB
Hunger
“Room 17"
Movie: ** “Extreme Measures” (1996) An ER doctor
investigates a homeless man’s strange death. ‘R’ ®
Movie:** 1
| "Bloodknot" I
TMC
(3:45) Movie
Movie: ★★★V2 "Things Change" (1988,
Comedy) Don Ameche. (In Stereo) 'PG'
Movie: ** “Money for Nothing" (1993) An unemployed
longshoreman finds a bundle of lost cash. ‘R’ SB
Movie: *★ "Mulholland Falls”(1996) Nick Nolte. A cop
in postwar L.A. searches for his ex-lover’s killer. ‘R’ El
Movie: “The Last Road" (1997, Drama)
Julie Strain. (In Stereo) 'NR'
Movie: * 1 /2 "The Surgeon" (1995,
Horror) Isabel Glasser. (In Stereo) ‘R’
UAW LOCAL 898
Membership, leadership and retirees
continue to support the locked-out
newspaper workers of Detroit.
in the public service
^ LOCAL 732
We Support Your Right To
Fight For Dignity and Justice
ROSEVILLE COMMUNITY SCHOOLS
EXECUTIVE BOARD AND MEMBERS
Teamsters Local 214
State County & Municipal Workers
Affiliated with International Brotherhood of Teamsters
President Joseph Valenti &
The Executive Board Support
The Locked-Out Newspaper
Workers In Their Struggle
For A Just Contract
MANCINI, SCHREUDER,
KLINE, and CONRAD, P.C.
For 23 Years, Attorneys Representing
Injured Workers and Their Families
We Support Your Right To Fight
For Dignity and Justice
28225 Mound Rd., Warren, MI
(810) 751-3900
Page 22 - [see page image]
SATURDAY MORNING/AFTERNOON
NOVEMBER 8,1997
8:00
8:30
9:00
9:30
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■ 1
■■■
1 FOX |o|Eyewitness Weekend
Imagine
Animals
Click (El)
Student
Honey, I Shrunk the Kids
Police Academy
Access Hollywood 33
Extra (In Stereo) S3
Poltergeist: The Legacy |
1 NBC lo |(7:00) Today (In Stereo) BE
Newsbeat Tday
Saved-Bell
City Guys
Saved-Bell
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Hang Time I Inside Stuff
Paid Prog. I Horse Racing: Breeders’ Cup. (Live) SB
ABC |©|l01Dalmts
New Doug
New Doug
Recess ®
Pepper Ann
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Big Ten
College Football: Michigan State at Purdue or Northwestern at Illinois. (Live)
|College Football: Regional Coverage
CBC © Theodore
SesamePk
Little Bear
Skinnmrk
Spilled Milk
Cents
Business
Lead 33
Gardener
Cottage
iTravels I Horse Racing: Breeders'Cup. (Live) 33
WB 0D ChannlUm
Superman
MeninBIck
[Batman/Superman
PinkyBrain
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lAdventures of Sinbad 33
Movie: ** “Ernest Goes to Jail” 0990) Jim Varney.
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Michigan
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Movie: *’/2 “Private Road"( 1988, Drama) Greg Evigan. |
Football
College Football: LSU at Alabama
CABLE CHANNELS
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(7:00) Movie: "Tree Grow" | Biography for Kids |Unexplained (R)
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Investigative Reports (R) [American Justice (R)
AMC
Movie: “Walk the Proud Land” (1956) |Movie: ★★V2 "Sign of the Pagan" (1954)
Movie: *★ “The Big Trail” (1930) John Wayne.
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Movie: ★** "Drums Along the Mohawk" (1939)
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Our Home (R) (In Stereo) Next Door |Handmade Golden
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Movie: “Just Like Dad" (1996, Drama) Wallace Shawn. |Sitters |Flash
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Movie: *★ “The In Crowd" (1988) ‘PG 1
Movie: kk'h "Sylvester" (1985) Richard Farnsworth. 35 [Movie: *★ “Tender Is the Night" (1962, Drama) Jennifer Jones. |Movie: *★ "Aspen Extreme" (1992) Paul Gross. ® |Movie: kk'/2 Swing Kids" (1993, Drama) ‘PG-13’
“One Crazy’
MAX
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(7:45) Movie: “The Big Picture" (1989) [Movie: ★★* Grease" (1978) John Travolta. 'PG' |Movie: **V2 “Hard Country" (1981, Drama) 'PG' |Movie: kk'h “Hero" (1992) Dustin Hoffman. 'PG-13’ |Movie: “Home for the Holidays" (1995)
(7:40)Movie: "Robbers" I Movie: "The Producers" (1967) I Movie: kk'h “Jumanji" (1995) Robin Williams. ‘PG'® [Movie: **★ "The Birdcaqel 1996) Robin Williams. ‘R’ iMovie: ★★ “The Right to Remain Silent" I "Sex, Lies, and Videotape'
SHO
TMC
SATURDAY EVENING
NOVEMBER 8,1997
5:00
BROADCAST CHANNELS
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
O
FOX
Outer Limits “Tempests”
(In Stereo) 33
News
Lions
Report
X-Files “Conduit” (In
Stereo) 33
Cops (In
Stereo) (PA)
Cops “Fort
Myers" ®
America’s Most Wanted:
America Fights Back ®
News
Cheers (In
Stereo) ®
Mad TV (In Stereo) ®
Tales From
the Crypt ®
Tales From
the Crypt ®
WCW Wrestling
O
NBC
(1:30) Horse Racing:
Breeders’ Cup. (Live) S3
News
NBC Nightly
News 33
Wheel of
Fortune 33
Road to
Riches ®
Pretender “Scott Free" (In
Stereo) ®
Sleepwalkers “Night
Terrors” (In Stereo) ®
Profiler Sam trails a killer
who is inspired by rainfall.
News
Saturday Night Live (In Stereo) ®
Conan “The Three
Virgins” (In Stereo)
O
ABC
(3:30) College Football: Regional Coverage -- Teams
to Be Announced. (Live)
News
Home
Videos
C-16 “Eight Pounds of
Pressure” (In Stereo) ®
Total Security “Who’s
Poppa?" (In Stereo) ®
Practice “The Means” (In
Stereo) ®
News
Movie: *** “White Men Can’t Jump" (1992) Two
basketball hustlers form an unlikely partnership.
Movie: ***
“Cocoon"
O
CBC
(1:30) Horse Racing:
Breeders’ Cup. (Live) S3
Saturday
Report S3
Fashion File
33
NHL
Pregame
NHL Hockey: Phoenix Coyotes at Toronto Maple Leafs. From Maple Leaf Gardens. |
(Live) ®
NHL Hockey: Mighty Ducks of Anaheim at Vancouver Canucks. From General
Motors Place. (Live) ®
“Dangerous-
Man"
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Confidential” (In Stereo) S3
Fame L.A. “The Beat
Goes On" (In Stereo) HI
Earth: Final Conflict
"Avatar" (In Stereo)
Hercules: The Legendary
Journeys (In Stereo) ®
Xena: Warrior Princess
"Gabrielle’s Hope” ®
Soldier of Fortune, Inc.
“Collateral Damage”
Ghost Stories “Blazes/A
Cold, Dark Place”
F/X: The Series “Ritual”
Movie:* "Freddy'sDead: 1
The Final Nightmare" ■
QD
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Stereo) SB
Simpsons I
(In Stereo)
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Martin 33
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Stereo)®
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Up, Roc"®
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Movie: kkk "Johnny Suede" (1991, Comedy) Brad 1
Pitt. The adventures of a naive rock 'n' roll wannabe.
©
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Victory
Garden S3
Mansion-
Europe
Lawrence Welk Show:
Veteran’s Day
Alligator! (R)
Nature “Incredible
Suckers” (R) (In Stereo) ®
Dangerfield (In Stereo)
(Part 2 of 2)
Dangerfield (In Stereo)
Sessions at West 54th
Beck; Ben Folds Five.
On Tour (In Stereo)
Dangerfield (In Stereo)
(Part 2 of 2)
©
CBS
(3:30) College Football: Louisiana State at Alabama.
(Live) SB
Pensacola: Wings of
Gold “Past Sins”
Dr. Quinn, Medicine
Woman “Lead Me Not” ®
Early Edition “Redfellas"
(In Stereo) ®
Walker, Texas Ranger
“Last of a Breed” ®
NYPD Blue "NYPD Lou”
(In Stereo) ®
Soul Train Taral. (In
Stereo)
Pensacola: Wings of
Gold “Past Sins"
A&E
Grand Tour “The Imperial
Hotels of Vienna" (R)
Home Again
(R)
Home Again
(R)
Mysteries of the Bible
“Last Supper” (R)
Biography This Week
Investigative Reports
Girl in the Photograph
Vietnam: The Camera at
War
Biography This Week (R)
Investigative Reports (R) J
-AMC
Movie: *** “The Young Philadelphians" (1959, Drama) Paul
Newman. An ambitious lawyer connives his way to the top.
| Movie: kkk “Cheaper by the Dozen"
(1950, Comedy) Clifton Webb.
Remember |
WENN®
Movie: kk'/2 “Ride Clear of Diablo"
(1954, Western) Audie Murphy.
Movie: *** “The Young Philadelphians" (1959), Alexis
Smith An ambitious lawyer connives his way to the top.
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|WENN®
\ “Cheaper by 1
\the Dozen" \
BET
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I Planet Groove Top Twenty (R)
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to Kill" (R)
I Mystery of the Crop
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[Wild Discovery “Great
Siberian Grizzly" (R)
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Target” (R)
Wild Discovery “Great
Siberian Grizzly” (R)
Staying Alive (R)
ESPN
Senior PGA
Golf
PGA Golf: Kapalua International - Third
Round. (Live)
Football
Scoreboard
ICollege Football: Florida State at North Carolina. (Live) ®
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Up
NFL’s Greatest Moments
FAM
Movie: ***'/2 “The Big Country” (1958, Western) Gregory Peck, Jean Simmons,
Charlton Heston. Texas ranchers involve an Easterner in a water rights feud.
[Movie: ** "Grease2"(1982, Musical) Maxwell Caulfield, Michelle
Pfeiffer. A British exchange student falls for a female gang leader.
Movie: kkV2 “Caddyshack” (1980) Chevy Chase. A
| vulgar newcomer clashes with the country club set.
Three
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Program
FSD
College Football: Conf. USA Game - Teams TBA ICollege Football: Big 12 Game - Teams to Be Announced. (Live)
| Sports | FOX Sports News
ICollege Football: Temple at Navy. (R)
LIFE
(4:00) Movie: “Deadly
(Relations"(1993, Drama)
[Movie: ★* "In the Best Interest of the Children" (1992)
A woman tries to win back custody of her children.
[Movie: ** “Twin Sisters”(1992) Stepfanie Kramer. A
woman’s masquerade draws her into a dark world.
[Movie: kk "Kaleidoscope"(1990) Jaclyn Smith. A
| detective tries to solve the mystery of three sisters.
Girls’ Night Out Stand-up
comedy with Eileen Fulton.
Paid
Program
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Program
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Clarissa
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Movie: kV.2 “Phoenix" (1996) Brad Dourif. ®
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(4:05) Movie: kk'/2 “An
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jWCW Saturday Night 33
[Movie: kkk “Fora Few Dollars More"(1965, Western) Clint Eastwood, Lee Van
Cleef. Two gunmen form an uneasy alliance to hunt down an outlaw.
[Movie: kk'/2 “BloodAlley" (1955, Adventure) John Wayne, Lauren
|Bacall. A seaman helps Chinese peasants escape Communists.
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Movie: kk'/2 “They Live" (1988) Roddy Piper. A drifter
uncovers an alien plot to control mankind.
Movie: *** “Twilight Zone: The Movie” (1983, Fantasy) John
luthgow. Big-screen adaptation of Rod Serling’s TV series.
Movie: kkV.2 "They Live” (1988) A drifter
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Movie: “Heartless” (1997, Mystery) Madchen Amick. A
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S3
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iMuppets
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|Movie: "Susie 0”(1996, Fantasy) Justin
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|Movie: **’/2 “Adventures in Babysitting"
(1987, Comedy) Elisabeth Shue. ‘PG-13’
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(4:45) Movie: ** “One
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Movie: *** “The Truth About Cats and Dogs" (1996)
A radio host lies about her looks to a potential suitor. 33
Movie: ** “The Evening Star" (1996) Aurora
Greenway deals with three troubled grandchildren. ®
Movie: ★★V2 “Maximum Risk” (1996, Adventure) A cop
lassumes the identity of his murdered twin brother. ‘R’ ®
Movie: ** “Nowhere to Run” (1993,
Adventure) Jean-Claude Van Damme. ‘R’
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With
MAX
(4:30) Movie: **’/2 "Mission:
\Impossible”0996) Tom Cruise. ‘PG-13’
[Movie: k'h “Feds" (1988, Comedy)
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Movie: *** “Brilliant Lies" (1996) Anthony LaPaglia. A
former employee sues her boss for sexual harassment.
Movie: kk “Escape From LA. ”(1996,
Adventure) Kurt Russell. ‘R’ ®
[Movie: * "The Affair" (1995, Adult)
|Raelyn Saalman. (In Stereo) 'NR'
Movie: * "Bad Moon" 1
|(1996) Mariel Hemingway. |
SHO
Holyfield
Movie: *** “Grease” (1978) John Travolta. Disparate
summer lovers meet again as high-school seniors. ‘PG’
[My Life as a
Dog (R) ®
Movie: ** “Dangerous Minds" (1995,
Drama) Michelle Pfeiffer. ‘R’ ®
[Extras:
Mirror
Fast Track
(In Stereo)
|Dead Man’s Gun A good
doctor saves a killer. (R)
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mising
Movie: k'h “The Dark Dancer” (1995,
Suspense) Shannon Tweed. ‘R’
TMC
(4:00) Movie
Movie: *★ “Babes in Toyland" (1986) Drew Barrymore.
A girl helps defend Toyland from the wicked Bamaby.
Movie: k'/2 “Johnny Mnemonic" (1995,
Science Fiction) Keanu Reeves. ‘R‘ ®
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Movie: “The Corporate Ladder" (1997, Suspense) An
unbalanced business assistant plots to get a raise. ‘R’
Movie: “Fast Money" (1996) A cash-filled
briefcase puts an unlikely duo on the run.
UAW LOCAL #7
Members stand in
Solidarity with the
Locked-Out Newspaper Workers.
LOCAL #7 MEMBERSHIP
FRANK MASSEY - President
LENITA GAINES - Financial Sec.
Sam T. Hart
Business Manager
IUOE
Local 324
and it’s members
“We support Detroit
newspaper workers
in their struggle for
a fair contract."
COMMUNICATIONS WORKERS
OF AMERICA AFL-CI0
LOCAL 4250/5050
Steve
PRESIDENT
Supports Newspaper
Workers in their Struggle
Shut Down dfok
Motown ’97
UAW LOCAL 22
Supports Sunday
StgpoD-7 journal and Detroit
Newspaper Workers
Page 23 - [see page image]
NOVEMBER 2, 1997
PAGE 23
To their fans’ delight,
Jane’s Addiction suffers a relapse
By Gary Graff
Journal Music Writer
J ane’s Addiction
hardly seemed the
most likely of rock
’n’ roll reunions.
Two of the ven
erable band’s
members - singer Perry
Farrell and drummer
Stephen Perkins - were
ensconced in a new project,
Porno for Pyros. Guitarist
David Navarro had become a
Red Hot Chili Pepper.
But the musicians gradu
ally began to re-enter one
another’s orbits, jamming at
concerts or joining in on pro
jects such as the song “Hard
Charger” for the Howard
Stern biopic “Private Parts.”
And when breaks in the
bands’ schedules coincided, it
seemed time to, as Perkins
puts it, “make ... a great
vacation.”
Thus we have the Jane’s
Addiction relapse - as
opposed to reunion. Original
Jane’s bassist Eric Avery
opted out, and he’s been
replaced by Navarro’s Chili
Peppers bandmate Flea, an
old comrade of Jane’s who
guested on the song “Idiots
Rule” from the group’s 1987
album “Nothing’s Shocking.”
It’s a cautious regrouping,
to be sure. The new album,
“Kettle Whistle,” has just
two new songs amid its out-
takes, demos and live record
ings. And the tour is slated
to last just a little longer
than a month.
“It’s just go get your ya-
ya’s and have some good fun
and let’s not milk this thing,”
Perkins, 30, explains.
Adds Navarro, also 30: “We
have a chance now to do
something that we all loved
See ROCK, Page 27
Library of America celebrates ‘literary treasures’
By John Gallagher
Journal Staff Writer
I t’s no secret that Americans can’t
seem to get enough novels by
Stephen King, John Grisham and
Michael Crichton. But these mid
dle-brow writers and their huge suc
cess tell only part of the story of
American reading tastes.
Consider the Library of America, a
nonprofit publishing venture that for
15 years has produced elegant, com
pact editions of the nation’s greatest
literary treasures. Next spring the
Library of America celebrates two
milestones - the 100th volume in its
series of American classics and the 4
millionth book sold.
Not just another leather-bound set
of classics, the Library of America has
always aimed to produce definitive
texts of America’s most important
writers. The volumes are stylishly
designed, with sewn bindings, and
are printed on acid-free paper that
will last for generations. Most impor
tant, LOA officials also aim to make
these volumes what their authors
intended them to be.
For example, next spring LOA will
publish two volumes of
James Baldwin’s nov
els and other writings.
Max Rudin, LOA’s
publisher, said the edition will mark
the first time that Baldwin’s complete
versions of his novels “Native Son” and
“Black Boy” will be published as
Baldwin intended, restoring many sec
tions cut by his original publishers
because of political, social or sexual
squeamishness.
In another recent example, LOA cel
ebrated the 50th anniversary of World
War II by producing a two-volume col
lection of classic war correspondence,
“Reporting World War II.” The volumes
contained dozens of columns by the
great Ernie Pyle as well as numerous
other hard-to-find treasures.
Despite a hefty price tag of about
$35 for each volume, the editions are
snapped up by collectors who want the
entire series.
“Despite everything we hear to the
contrary, people are
interested in reading,”
Cheryl Hurley, the
first and only presi
dent of LOA, said in a phone interview
from her New York office. “I think peo
ple are reading lots of Stephen King,
but they’re also reading lots of
Emerson, too.”
LOA volumes have collected such
indisputably great American authors
as Walt Whitman, Herman Melville,
Mark Twain and Jack London. But the
series also includes such surprising or
controversial authors as Raymond
Chandler and other American crime
novelists of the ’30s, ’40s and ’50s.
“The idea is to show the richness
and range of American writing,”
Hurley explains. “These writers were
significant. They are a part of the
body politic, even if in some cases like
the crime writers you didn’t study
them in school.”
Given the scope of the series, the
elegance of the individual volumes
and the faithfulness to the authors’
original intent, the Library of
America enjoys a growing reputation
as the most complete source of
American classics. In a typical trib
ute, the critic Alfred Kazin has called
it “the most satisfying publishing
event of my lifetime.”
Which classic American writers are
the best-sellers in the LOA series?
Rudin says that the works of
Abraham Lincoln and the memoirs of
Ulysses S. Grant and William
Tecumseh Sherman top the list. That
just goes to prove, Rudin says, that
the late critic Edmund Wilson was
correct when he said there are three
kinds of books — fiction, nonfiction
and Civil War books.
about books
Warner Bros. Records Inc.
The Jane's Addiction temporary reunion is its way “to get your ya-ya’s and have some good fun."
Page 24 - [see page image]
Nature was good to state’s wine grapes
T he first dusting of snow crept
in from the Denver area last
week, wilting the last of the
begonias in our backyard. It
had been a glorious summer for flow
ers but a potential disaster for the
farmers.
At the Michigan State Fair wine
competition in August, Dr. Stan
Howell, Michigan State’s illustrious
viticulturist, was talking to a grape
grower from the Berrien County
area. Both were gloomy about this
year’s crop.
“As we sit here, the first week in
August, the vines are where they nor
mally are in June,” one of them said.
Then came September. It was
warm. Then came October. It stayed
as bright and sunny as August. The
wine grapes just sat there for at least
a month longer than normal and
basked.
Inside those little grape balls the
juice was getting riper and sweeter;
the sugar levels were getting higher;
the skin was getting thicker and rich
er; the pulp was getting more aro
matic and denser.
The result was that this extended
summer turned what had started as
a disaster into one of the most spec
tacular years for wine grapes this
state has ever seen. It’s an example
of how much farmers are at the
Cook
On wine
mercy of Mother Nature.
The wineries seem to be happy
with the way the season turned out,
and the wines are now pressed and
fermenting away.
In a couple of months, the wine
will be “racked,” separated from its
sediment and gingerly transferred to
oak barrels, where it will sit and
begin its aging process, collecting
additional flavors from the wood.
In the spring, the wines will be bot
tled and stored again. There, they
will be allowed to age more until the
winemaker decides they are ready
for drinking. Then we get them.
Meanwhile, the sun sits lower on the
horizon; the shards of cold tell us
winter is here and hunting season is
about to open; it’s a time of year that
conjures up hearty stews and log
fires. That also means red wines.
When it comes to wines and stews,
there is not just the richness of the
broth to consider but also the sweet
ness of carrots and onions, the acidi
ty of tomatoes, the aromas of garlic
and perhaps fresh rosemary and
marjoram and the thickness of pota
toes.
All these ingredients complicate a
choice of wine. Young cabernet sauvi-
gnon will work to some degree. Older,
finer reds will not. Stews will slaugh
ter them.
I had dinner two years ago in a
tiny village in Provence in southern
France in a restaurant called Ous-
tra-ou, which in the Provencal dialect
(a mix of Spanish, Basque and
Italian) means “the wind.”
There were two special dishes on
the menu that chilly day in October.
One was freshly picked wild
chanterelle mushrooms - they
brought a shopping basket of them to
the table to show us - braised in
wine and cream and baked in a puff
pastry. How could you resist?
The other was a stew made of the
rump of a buck, shot locally and
cooked in its own blood and wine,
carrots and baby onions, cooked for
about eight hours in a slow oven.
Sound gross?
Well, I’m here to tell you that it
was one of the delights of my life. It
came to the table in the copper pot in
which it had been cooked, accompa
nied by nothing but locally made
fresh, buttered noodles.
For wine, I picked a Domaine
Tempier, which sells here for about
$25 a bottle and there for $15.
Tempier is made of several different
grapes and has all kinds of aromas
and spiciness that stand up well to
something as rich as venison stew.
Tempier is made from a mix of
mourvedre, grenache and cabernet
sauvigon, all red wine grapes.
Tempier, as far as I’m concerned, is
one of the great wines of France, so
overlooked by those who chase
around Chateau Haut Brion from
Bordeaux and Romanee-Conti from
Burgundy at more than $100 a bot
tle.
I found a wine of similar character
to the Tempier last week. It is an
absolute steal at a mere $9 a bottle.
The wine is a Spanish Rioja, the
great red of northern Spain. It is
made from tempranillo, grenache
and cabernet sauvignon.
It is called Paternina Banda Azul,
and it gives off a spiciness and hints
of cherries and leather. It’s got a
slightly rough, peasant quality to it
but is also a wine that has a full-
mouth feel and lingers nicely.
Banda Azul (meaning azure band,
which it has across the label) is what
you might call a fireplace wine. Serve
it with chili, Irish stew, game, any
thing wintry. And enjoy.
Super Sunday in store
Journal file photo by REBECCA COOK
HBO’s “Calling Dr. Kevorkian: A Date with Dr. Death,” featuring Dr. lack Kevorkian, right,
and attorney Geoffrey Fieger, airs at 10:30 Tuesday night.
McFARLIN, From Page 15
bitter, seething widow named Glory
who moves to Tampa in the 1960s
after her alcoholic husband’s suicide.
Glory takes the problems of her
world out on the faces of her two
young daughters, until guess who
steps in? What, don’t you watch day
time TV? The TV-movie is airing in
late night due to WXYZ-TVs Lions
telecast.
■ “George and Leo,” 9 p.m.
Monday, CBS - You know it’s sweeps
month when a show reunites former
costars for a “special episode,” but
this takes the old gimmick to new
extremes! Bob Newhart, whose list of
ex-sitcom mates reads like the
Hollywood phone directory, and Judd
Hirsch of “Taxi” and “Dear John”
fame bring 20 of their past partners
back to the tube (that’s nearly a
guest star a minute!) for a tale in
which George (Newhart) wins a free
group therapy session and Leo
(Hirsch) gets a new van for “taxi”
service through a*charity auction.
The therapist? Peter Scolari of
“Newhart.” Among other notable
names on deck: Julia Duffy, Tom
Poston and “Larry, Darryl and
Darryl” from “Newhart”; Marcia
Wallace, Jack Riley, Bill Daily and
Peter Bonerz of “The Bob Newhart
Show”; Marilu Henner and Jeff
Conaway from “Taxi,” and Jane Carr
and Harry Groener of “Dear John.”
You may not be able to tell all these
players even with a program.
■ “Lewis & Clark: The Journey of
the Corps of Discovery,” 8 p.m.
Tuesday and Wednesday (repeated at
midnight Wednesday and Thursday),
PBS (Channel 56 in Detroit) - It’s
Lewis and Clark and Burns. Ann
Arbor-born documentary master Ken
Burns, a trailblazer in his own right,
retraces the expedition by
Meriwether Lewis, secretary to
President Thomas Jefferson, and his
Army buddy William Clark to explore
the Missouri River and discover a
Northwest Passage into the unchart
ed areas of the American West from
1804-1806. In Burns’ now-trademark
style, the two-night special is a
detailed, lyrical and thought-provok
ing voyage of discovery in its own
right.
■ “Calling Dr. Kevorkian: A Date
with Dr. Death,” 10:30 p.m.
Tuesday, HBO - And to think, Detroit
was once known only for automobiles.
Now the assisted suicide capital of
Earth, the Motor City and Dr. Jack
Kevorkian receive HBO’s “America
Undercover” documentary treatment
in a one-hour analysis that strives
mightily to let Kevorkian explain his
uncompromising point of view and
maverick right-to-die tactics without
passing judgment on them. Four of
the doctor’s “patients” are also fea
tured in the broadcast.
Page 25 - [see page image]
NOVEMBER 2, 1997
PAGE 25
going out
Folkies to perform for peace
By Audrey McKenna
Journal Staff Writer
S econd Opinion, a Lansing-
based folk group that has
appeared at the Ann Arbor
Folk Festival, will perform a
benefit concert for the Swords into
Plowshares Peace Center and
Gallery, a project of Central United
Methodist Church, at 8 p.m.
Saturday.
Concert admission is $20.
The group will do a sneak preview
of the performance at Saturday
Night Central, the church’s alterna
tive worship with the arts at 5:30
Saturday. SNC is free.
Central is located at Woodward
and Grand Circus Park.
Call 313-965-5422.
Gershwins tribute
“The Memory of All That ...
Gershwin on Ice,” starring Dorothy
Hamill, celebrates the centennial of the
births of George and Ira Gershwin, 2
and 8 p.m. Sat. and 2 p.m. next Sun. at
the Detroit Opera House. A singer and
narrator explain the lyrical and histori
cal high points of the Pulitzer Prize-
winning brothers woven into the pro
duction numbers. Original recordings
of A1 Jolson’s “Swanee,” Ethel
Merman’s “I Got Rhythm,” Doris Day’s
“ ’S Wonderful,” and many more will be
featured in the one hour and forty-five
minute performance. Tickets are $15 to
$50. The Opera House is located at
1526 Broadway. Call 248-645-6666.
Selected shows
■Matchbox 20, 7:30 p.m. Wed., $15,
State Theatre, Detroit.
■ Lee (Scratch) Perry and Mad
Professor, 8 p.m. Wed., $20, Majestic,
Detroit.
■ Link Wray, Dieselhead and the
Hentchmen, 8 p.m. Thu., $15, Majestic,
Detroit.
■ Ray Davies (of the Kinks), 7:30 p.m.
Sat., $23.50 or $27.50, Michigan
Theater, Ann Arbor.
■ Chicago and the Beach Boys, 7 p.m.
Sat., $15.25 or $25.25, the Palace, 248-
377-0100.
■ Puff Daddy and the Family starring
Puff Daddy featuring Lil’ Kim, Mase,
112, Lil’ Cease, the Lox, Busta Rhymes,
Foxy Brown, Jay-Z and Usher, 7 p.m.
next Sun., $35.50 or $45.50, the Palace,
248-377-0100.
■ Widespread Panic, 7:30 p.m. next
Sun., $20, Michigan Theater, Ann
Arbor.
Music
Downtown Library’s Noontime
Concerts presents patriotic melodies
and marches (for Election Day) by the
Edinborough Saxophone Quartet, 12:15
p.m. Tue., 121 Gratiot, Detroit, 313-
224-0580 ... Fifth Avenue: Jimmy
Thackery, Thu.; the Reefermen featur
ing James Wailin and Harmonica
Shah, Tue., 215 W. 5th Avenue, Royal
Oak, 248-542-9922 ... Soup Kitchen,
music starts at 9 p.m.: Randy Volin &
the Sonic Blues, Fri.; Chris Beard
Blues Band, Sat., 1585 Franklin at
Orleans, Detroit, 313-259-2643 ...
Memphis Smoke (Royal Oak): 2nd
annual Battle of the Blues Band,
tonight; Mystery Train featuring Jim
McCarty, Fri.-Sat., 100 S. Main, 248-
543-4300 ... Fox & Hounds: Original
Hits, Mon.; Steve Somers Band with
Valerie Barrymore, Tue.-Wed.; Blue Cat
with Ken Murphy, Thu.; Jimmie
Jackson & the Blues Connection, Fri.-
Sat., 1560 Woodward, Bloomfield Hills,
248-644-4800 ... Motor City Josh & the
Big 3, Fri.-Sat., Sports (a 50’s Bar &
Grill), 166 Maple, Wyandotte, 313-285-
5060 ... Moby Dick’s: Diamond Dukes,
Fri.; Nikki James & the
Flamethrowers, Sat., 5452 Schaefer,
Dearborn, 313-581-3650 ... the
Hatchetmen, Fri., Stan’s Dugout, 3350
Auburn, Auburn Hills, 248-852-6433.
Theater
Performance Network, “Agnes of
God,” 2 p.m. today, $9 or $12, 408 W.
Washington, Ann Arbor, 313-663-0681
... “Picasso at the Lapin Agile,” Steve
Martin’s award-winning comedy, Tue.
through Nov. 16, Fisher Theatre,
Detroit, 313-872-1000 ... Youtheatre
presents “Good Driving Amelia
Bedelia,” 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. Sat. and 2
p.m. next Sun., for ages 3-6, $8 ($7 in
advance), Music Hall Center, 350
Madison, Detroit, 313-963-2366 ...
“Marla In-Between,” a new drama by
William Boyer, presented by RAT pro
ductions, 8 p.m. Thu.-Sat. and 4 p.m.
Sun., through next Sun., 1515
Broadway, Detroit, 313-965-1515 or
313-831-0665 ... Meadow Brook
Theatre presents Edward Albee’s
“Three Tall Women,” 8 p.m. Tue. and
Thu.; 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. Wed.; 2 p.m.
and 6 p.m. Sat.; 2 and 6:30 p.m. Sun.,
$18-$26.50, through Nov. 16, Rochester,
248-377-3300 ... Hilberry’s repertory:
“The Lady’s Not for Burning” by
Christopher Fry, Shakespeare’s
“Othello” and Eduard de Filippo’s
“Saturday, Sunday, Monday,” through
Dec. 4; performance times: 8 p.m. Thu.-
Sat., 2 p.m. Wed. and Sat. matinees;
$10-$ 17, Cass and Hancock, Detroit,
313-577-2972.
Films/comedy
“Caesar and Cleopatra,” (1946) star
ring Vivien Leigh in an adaptation of
George Bernard Shaw’s comedy, 2 p.m.,
DIA Lecture Hall, 5200 Woodward,
Detroit; free with museum admission,
313-833-4249 ... Finis Henderson, 8:30
p.m. Thu., $10 or ($20.95 dinner &
show); 8:15 or 10:45 p.m., $12, ($23.95),
Joey’s Comedy Club/Paisano’s, 5070
Schaefer, Dearborn, 313-584-8885 ...
German films and classical music will
be featured during the University of
Michigan-Dearborn’s cultural events
series; this week: “You Me Too,” (1986),
a murder mystery, 7:30 p.m. Fri.,
Science Bldg., Room 138, 313-593-5433
... Ann Arbor Silent Film Society pre
sents its Armistice Day Show featuring
“The Bond,” (1918) and “The Patent
Leather Kid,” (1927), 3 p.m. next Sun.,
$4, Clarion Hotel, 2900 Jackson, 313-
677-1359 ... Detroit Film Theatre: “M”
(restored), 4 and 7 tonight; “To Speak
the Unspeakable: The Message of Elie
Wiesel,” 7 p.m. Mon. and “Diary of a
Seducer,” 7 and 9:30 p.m. Fri., 4, 7 and
9:30 p.m. Sat. and 4 and 7 p.m. next
Sun., $5.50, 313-833-2323 ... “Air Force
One,” University of Michigan-
Dearborn’s Student Activities Bldg.,
free, 313-593-5390 ... Eleven marbles,
an eight-person spontaneous comedy
troupe, every Thu. at 10:30 p.m., Mill
Street Lounge, Pontiac, 248-333-2362
... Second City: “Generation X-Files,” 8
p.m. Wed.-Thu. and Sun.; 8 and 10:30
p.m. Fri.-Sat., $12-$19.50, 313-965-
2222.
Authors/lectures
Shaman Drum Bookshop: Larry
Smith reads from his novel “A Map of
Who We Are,” 4-6 p.m. today; Pat Mora
will read from “Aunt Carmen’s Book of
Practical Saints,” 8 p.m. Tue.; Anna
Roiphe reads from “Fruitful: Living the
Contradictions, a Memoir of Modern
Motherhood,” 8 p.m. Wed.; Rebecca
Reynolds and Marsha de la O will
mark the second anniversary of the
Kalamazoo-based New Issues in Poetry
Series, 8 p.m. Thu.; Thomas
Trautmann, professor of history and
anthropology at U-M, will sign his lat
est book, “Aryans and British India,” 4-
6 p.m. Fri.; Detroit’s own Ron Allen will
read from his recently reprinted, “I
Want My Body Back,” 8 p.m. Sat.;
Robert Axelrod discusses “The
Complexity of Cooperation,” 4 p.m. next
Sun., 311 S. State St., Ann Arbor, all
events are free, 313-662-7407 ...
Baldwin Public Library presents
“Books at Lunch”; librarian Toni Grow
will present “Little Gems” and “The
Misalliance,” bring a sack lunch, noon
Wed., 300 W. Merrill, Birmingham, 248-
647-1700.
Exhibits/art/design
Arts Students League of Detroit,
“Personal Inflections,” through Nov. 23;
opening reception: 7-10 p.m. Fri., Mask
Gallery, 2679 E. Grand Blvd., Detroit,
313-577-2980 ... Casa de Unidad
Cultural Arts and Media Center, “For
My Mother and Her Family,” created by
artist Hector Perez Tapia. It’s a Day of
the Dead exhibit through Dec. 12;
opening will be noon-6 today, 1920
Scotten, Detroit, 313-843-9598 ...
Swords into Plowshares Peace Center
and Gallery offers the 6th biennial,
international juried show,
“Transforming Visions,” through Jan.
17, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tue., Thu. and
Sat., 33 E. Adams on Grand Circus
Park, 313-963-7575 ... “Sacred Arts of
Haitian Vodou,” through Dec. 28,
Museum of African American History,
315 E. Warren, Detroit, 313-494-5800
... Swann Gallery: “Angels &
Imagination,” an all media group show;
along with recent paintings by Violet
Purcell Shooltz and the photography of
Ray Rohr, through Sat., 1250 Library,
Detroit, 313-965-4826 ... Main Detroit
Library presents an exhibit, “The
Power of Beauty to Restore Wholeness,”
through Mon., 5201 Woodward, 313-
833-4042 ... Detroit Institute of Arts:
Dr. Asa Hilliard Callaway, professor of
Urban Education at Georgia State
University, will lecture on “Ancient
Egypt and African Culture,” 4 p.m. Fri.,
DIA Theatre; John Szarkowski, photog
rapher, author and former director of
photography at the Museum of Modern
Art, New York, presents a free lecture
entitled, “Alfred Stieglitz at Lake
George,” 8 p.m. Wed., Lecture Hall ...
“Changing Spaces: Artists’ Projects
from the Fabric Workshop and Museum
in Philadelphia,” through Feb. 22;
“Fabulous Monsters: Fantasy
Marionettes from the Paul McPharlin
Collection,” through today; “Splendors
of Ancient Egypt,” through Jan. 4;
“Early Modern Masterpieces: Selections
from the Permanent Collection,”
through spring; “Contemporary
Masterpieces: Selections from the
Permanent Collection,” through Feb.
28; “A Renaissance Altarpiece
Preserved: Techniques and
Conservations of Tobias and Three
Archangels,’ “ through Jan. 4; 11 a.m.-4
p.m. Wed.-Fri., 11 a.m.-5 p.m., week
ends, 313-833-7900 ... Cranbrook Art
Museum: 10-5 p.m. Wed., Fri.-Sat.; 10
a.m.-9 p.m. Thu. and noon-5 p.m. Sun.,
$4, Bloomfield Hills, 248-645-323...
Toledo Museum of Art: “Medieval
Manuscripts from the Collection,”
through Jan. 4; “Bound to Be
Interesting: Unusual & Impressive
Book Bindings,” through March 22;
“Geoffrey Beene,” through Jan. 4; 2445
Monroe at Scottwood , 419-255-8000 ...
Alley Culture offers “Art + Suitcase,
Will Travel,” works by Detroit, New
Jersey and New York artists, through
Thu., Trumbull and Lincoln, Detroit,
313-222-7691 ... Oak Park Library:
“Elayne at 48: A Photographic
Journey,” through Wed., 14200 Oak
Park Blvd., 248-691-7480 ... Creative
Arts Center: “Memory and
Transformation: Betha Cohen, Solo
Exhibit,” through Thu., Pontiac, 248-
355-7849... “Sea Realism,” Brian
Taylor’s Watercolor Show and Sale,
through Nov., OM Cafe, Ferndale ...
Elaine Jacob Gallery’s opening exhibit:
“Nancy Spero/Leon Golub:
Contemporaries,” through Nov. 29, 4841
Cass, Detroit, 313-577-2423 ...
Community Arts Gallery: “O
Pelourinho!: Popular Art from the
Historic Heart of Brazil,” through Fri.,
150 Art Bldg., Wayne State University.
New on sale
Portishead, Dec. 9 at the State
Theatre, Detroit, $21...Bernie Mac, Jan.
2 at the Fox Theatre, Detroit, $50, $35,
$27.50...The Wallflowers, Dec. 12 at U-
M Hill Auditorium, Ann Arbor, $20.
Please send “Going Out” items to The
Detroit Sunday Journal, 450 W. Fort, Detroit
48226.
Page 26 - [see page image]
PAGE 26
NOVEMBER 2, 1997
rating guide
o see it now i wait for the video
Q read a book instead
recent openings
“A Life Less Ordinary” E The
same folks who gave us the highly
regarded “Trainspotting” a year or so
ago stumbled this time out with a
tale of angels sent to Earth to bring a
hapless janitor and a spoiled rich girl
together. Rated R. - Ellen Creager
“Boogie Nights” O The season’s
least likely feel-good movie, this is a
blast from the ’70s in which a compa
ny of porn filmmakers is presented as
a sweet commune. The film refuses to
judge or punish its surprisingly
engaging characters. R. - Matt Black
“Fairytale - A True Story” O for
kids, 1 for adults Not to deny its
quiet measured charms - think
Merchant-Ivory for kids - this film
struggles a bit trying to depict two
British girls who claimed to have
photographed fairies in the after-
math of World War I. PG. - Gary
Graff
“Gattaca” £0 This grim look at a
world in which a DNA elite rules
over everyone else is as dim as its fic
tionalized future. PG-13. - Michelle
Banks
still showing
O
“Air Force One” R. - John
Gallagher
“Batman and Robin” PG-13. -J.G.
“Career Girls” R. - M. Black
“Contact” PG. - M. Black '
“The Devil’s Advocate” R. - M.
Banks
“The Full Monty” R .-J.G.
“George of the Jungle” PG.
- M. Black
“Hoodlum” R. - M. Black
“L.A. Confidential” R. - M. Banks
“Leave It to Beaver” PG. - G. G.
“Men in Black” PG-13. - M. Banks
“Mimic” R. - M. Banks
“Most Wanted” R. - M. Black
“The Myth of Fingerprints” R. -
M. Black
“RocketMan” PG. - G.G.
“Seven Years in Tibet” PG-13. -
J.G.
“Shall We Dance” PG. - J.G.
“Spawn” PG-13. - M. Banks
“U-Turn” R.-M. Black
“Washington Square” PG. - M.
Black
“U-Turn” R. - M. Black
just opened
Families are frozen in time
“The Ice Storm” O
By Ellen Creager
Journal Staff Writer
“The Ice Storm” is a story of sus
pended animation - that long, pre
carious moment when the world
goes still. Then, the deadly slide
and crack-up.
Based on Rick Moody’s 1994
novel, this masterfully constructed
and deeply moving film by director
Ang Lee (“Sense and Sensibility”)
focuses on sexual betrayal and
moral confusion in two upper-mid
dle-class Connecticut families, circa
1973. Ben Hood (Kevin Kline) is
carrying on a halfhearted fling with
his neighbor Janey Carver
(Sigourney Weaver), not entirely
behind the back of his wife, Elena
(Joan Allen). Meanwhile, the
Hoods’ 14-year-old daughter Wendy
(Christina Ricci) is attracted to
brothers Mikey and Sandy Carver
(Elijah Wood and Adam Hann-
Byrd), while her older brother Paul
(Tobey Maguire), unlucky in love,
is hoping for an encounter with a
sophisticated girl from his private
school.
Ang perfectly captures how two
generations of the American middle
class, in claiming freedom, were
chained to the destructive demands
of the sexual revolution. Ricci is
luminous and complex in her role
as Wendy. Kline, Allen and Maguire
lead the ensemble with strong per
formances.
As the weather deteriorates in
the film, so do the families. Ben
and Elena find themselves at a
“key party,” where couples swap
keys and partners for the night.
Their children, meanwhile, are con
ducting their own risky experi
ments. And Mikey Carver, awed
with the coming storm and the
clearness of the air “when the
molecules stop moving” is pulled
into the maelstrom.
Though the set and costumes
clearly evoke the ’70s with chain
belts, ponchos, wide ties, sideburns
and glass houses, Lee never allows
the period decor to take priority
over the powerful story. The emo
tion is repressed here, cultivating
its power by illuminating raw fila
ments of isolation inside the char
acters and lacerating patched-over
tears in their hearts. Anyone who
lived through the 1970s as a parent
or child will recall with pain the
mixed-up moment in time it was.
Rated R.
Red Corner” £H
This could have been a much
more novel courtroom thriller than
it is, given that it’s the first
Western film to be set in a Chinese
court. But no.
It was too much to hope that a
Hollywood movie would refrain
from Hollywood heroics. This one
largely nullifies the Chinese setting
it so carefully lays in around its
story of an American lawyer on
trial for murder in Beijing. A
Chinese beauty has been found
slashed to death in his hotel room
following a night of revelry after
the legal hotshot landed a big TV
satellite deal with the Chinese.
Anybody else could smell a frame-
up here, but not the stern Chinese.
One reason “Red Corner” couldn’t
be filmed in China is that its star,
Richard Gere, is Hollywood’s most
prominent activist in the campaign
to free Tibet, long under Chinese
rule.
As it is, Gere’s heroics - he
escapes and plays detective to get
himself off the hook - render “Red
Corner” guilty of credibility destroy
ing excess. Only Bai Ling, as Gere’s
self-sacrificing defense attorney,
emerges interestingly, acquitting
herself with dignity and a crisp
intelligence one hopes will soon be
seen to better advantage in a better
film. R. - Matt Black
“SwitchBack” g
“SwitchBack” runs out of cat-and-
mouse moves about two-thirds of
the way through. Then it quickly
gets formulaic and predictable.
Until it reaches an imaginative
stand-still on a railroad trestle in
the snowy Colorado Rockies, howev
er, it’s a fresher than usual take on
serial killer pursuit, careening
around the country until the obliga
tory showdown.
Dennis Quaid is dogged, convinc
ingly pained and raging as a rene
gade FBI agent pulled off the case
after the killer kidnaps his infant
son. But he continues the pursuit
on his own. Danny Glover is
allowed a change of pace as a blus
tery railroader who turns up along
the way, and Jared Leto holds his
own as an ice chip-eyed fugitive
who hitchhikes his way into
Glover’s car in Amarillo, Texas,
after a man there is found with his
throat cut.
Although the film meanders more
than is good for it, the slow tempo
allows characters’ secrets to be
revealed by degrees, a sound
enough strategy until obviousness
takes over. R. - M. Black
“Conspiracy Theory” R .-J.G.
“The Edge” R. - M. Banks
“Excess Baggage” PG-13. - M. Black
“The Game” R .-J.G.
“Good Burger” PG-13. - G.G.
“I Know What You Did Last
Summer” R. - M. Black
“In & Out” PG-13. - M. Black
“Kiss the Girls” R. - M. Black
“LiarLiar” PG-13. - M. Banks
“The Lost World: Jurassic Park”
PG-13. - M. Banks
“Money Talks” R. - M. Black
“My Best Friend’s Wedding”
PG-13. - William Hanson
“Playing God” R. - M. Black
“The End of Violence” R. - M.
Black
“House of Yes” R .-J.G.
“The Matchmaker” R. - M. Black
“The Peacemaker” R. - M. Black
“Fire Down Below” R.
“Going All the Way” PG.
“Napoleon” G.
“Soul Food” R.
“Wishmaster” R.
For metro Detroit movie listings, see
the Movie Guide on Page 14.
coming attractions
“Mad City” - Dustin Hoffman and
John Travolta star as newsman and
hostage-taker, respectively, caught up
in a bizarre media circus of their own
making. Rated PG-13.
“Midnight in the Garden of Good
and Evil” - A film based on John
Berendt’s best-selling book about a
shocking murder in contemporary
Savannah, Ga., starring Kevin
Spacey and directed by Clint
Eastwood.
“Wings of the Dove” - The latest
movie to be based on a Henry James
novel, this passionate turn-of-the-cen-
tury romance stars Helena Bonham
Carter, Elizabeth McGovern and
Charlotte Rampling. Rated R.
Page 27 - [see page image]
NOV. 2,
PAGE 27
1997
f ROSANNE C. LESSEN
Jane’s Addiction relapses
ROCK, From Page 23
again. I don’t see why not. The whole
idea of playing with Steve and Perry
again is such an emotional idea for
me that to give you concrete words as
to why or how is close to impossible.”
The quick sellouts for the shows -
about four minutes in most cities,
including Detroit (which has since
added tickets) - prove that Jane’s
fans are just as excited. That should
not be surprising; despite its short
five years together, Jane’s Addiction
became a mythic band in the modern
rock world, an alternative harbinger
lauded for its no-holds-barred
approach, its edgy stage shows and
its controversial, sometimes censored
album graphics.
And it was Jane’s last major gasp -
headlining the first Lollapalooza tour
in 1991, which Farrell organized -
that kicked open the door for the
alternative rock revolution of the
early ’90s.
The group called it quits at the top
of its game, with a split that was as
quiet as it was surprising.
“I can safely say there were person
ality conflicts,” Navarro says. “We
were pretty young and green in this
business. And in life. A lot of it was
really overwhelming for all of us. It
kind of got away from us.”
The musicians continued to play,
however, and Jane’s legend grew as a
couple of its songs - the frenetic
“Been Caught Stealing” and the
chiming “Jane Says,” with its refer
ence to St. Andrews Hall - took their
place on radio playlists next to
“Smells Like Teen Spirit” and
“Jeremy.” Not quite estranged from
each other, the musicians kept in
touch and shared a sense that work
ing together again was inevitable.
“Me and Perry always will have
Eric and David as friends and musi
cians,” Perkins says.
“Dave is one of my all-time-favorite
friends; I’ve had him since high
school. ... We used to play the
Troubadour at the age of 15. And then
to go through Jane’s together was just
an experience I can’t even put into
words. That’s exactly what I wished
for, to be in a band with Dave and
travel and make people happy.
“Our connection goes so deep that I
always knew throughout Porno for
Pyros that there would always be
another musical adventure with me
and Dave Navarro.”
The “Hard Charger” project gave
them that opportunity and, as Perkins
says, “a lot of adrenalin came out and
a lot of good feelings and emotions.
One thing led to another.”
The question now is whether this
relapse is permanent. Navarro and
Perkins - who weeded through 500
tapes in his closet to select tracks for
“Kettle Whistle” - don’t exactly dodge
the question, but they’re carefully cir
cumspect, clearly afraid to jinx the
Jane’s situation or to write off their
other bands too early.
“I think we’re all feeling very
relaxed about it,” says Navarro. “We’re
not interested in banging out product,
so to speak. We’re just interested in
doing it right and taking our time.
There’s more to it for me than just
going in and cutting a new song. To
me, it’s getting reacquainted with
some old friends on a personal level
and on a musical level.”
Adds Perkins, “We’re gonna play it
by ear. We love making music togeth
er. Imagine going to a party, four or
five nights a week, and your band’s
playing ... great. Of course you’d do it.
In a heartbeat!”
Jane’s Addiction and Goldie perform
at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Michigan
State Fairgrounds Coliseum, Eight
Mile Road and Woodward, Detroit.
Tickets are $25 in advance, $28 day of
show. Call 313-369-8250.
horoscope
Aries (March 21 - April 20)
You will have the chance to mix business
with pleasure. Finances are on the upswing.
Spend quality time with someone you love.
Taurus (April 21 - May 20)
Someone who has been out of your life for a
long time will return. A crisis situation is
reolved through clear communication.
Gemini (May 21 - June 20)
Stop procrastinating. Begin exercising, eat
ing right and pursuing the goals you have set.
There is no time like the present.
Cancer (June 21 - July 20)
There is a good chance you will be dealing
with major changes in the workplace. Don’t
take things too personally. Remember, it is
only temporary.
Leo (July 21 - Aug. 21)
A last-minute invitation leads to fun. Don’t
believe everything you hear, and stop gossips
in their tracks. Spreading gossip isn’t healthy.
Virgo (Aug. 22 - Sept. 22)
Life isn’t supposed to be all work; get out
and do the things you enjoy. Take a few hours
to read a good book or watch a favorite film.
Libra (Sept. 23 - Oct. 22)
It makes no sense to continue a relationship
that was over long ago. It is difficult but nec
essary to move on with your life.
Scorpio (Oct. 23 - Nov. 22)
A friend is planning a special event and
needs your creative input. A philosophical dis
cussion proves helpful.
Sagittarius (Nov. 23 - Dec. 20)
It isn’t easy to find your motivation in cer
tain situations, but once it happens you can
conquer the world.
Capricorn (Dec. 21 - Jan. 19)
A new hobby can be lots of fun. Plan a holi
day trip now or get your home ready for the
company that soon will be on its way.
Aquarius (Jan. 20 - Feb. 18)
A family member is going through a great
deal of emotional distress. Sometimes just
being there for someone is enough.
Pisces (Feb. 19 - March 20)
Deal calmly with a difficult situation. Take
better care of your health. The holidays are
coming up, and you need to have an exercise
program in place.
I
Attorney at Law
Former Member, Newspaper Guild
Emphasizing a progres
sive view in all areas of
family law.
k
Phone (313) 382-5622
^6828 Park Avenue, Allen Park, MI 48101^
Scviqettt
^ /APPLIANCE
• SALES
• SERVICE
• PARTS
I SEE DAVID M. TflRPLEY
Cuautij PiadcccU•
(810) 791-0560
35950 Gratiot
Mt. Clemens, Ml
Warren Professional Fire Fighters Union
“You have As Long
our Support (jyJrqjn as it Takes”
Ken Behnke
President
Mark Schimanski
Vice President
LOCAL 1383 • AFL-CIO
Gary D. Micu
Secretary
Fred Helfmann
Treasurer
r
Walter R. Mabry
Executive Secretary-Treasurer
and the Membership of the
MICHIGAN REGIONAL COUNCIL
OF CARPENTERS
CO Oftr'C
Support
Detroit Newspaper Workers
in their labor dispute ^
, AUTOMOBILE-AEROSPACE-AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENT WORKERS
of AMERICA (UAW)
UAW LOCAL 4444
3938 Bellevue Rd. • Toledo, OH 43613
Supports
Locked Out
Newspaper
Workers
James Ray Jr.
President
James Dudley
Secretary/Treasurer
LOCAL 1250
City of Warren Employees
Send our Support to
STRUGGLING NEWSPAPER
WORKERS
Martens, Ice, Geary, Klass,
Legghio, Israel & Gorchow, rc.
Attorneys and Counselors at Law
Representing Unions & Working People
• Personal Injuries
• Workers’ Compensation
• Employee Rights
1400 NORTH PARK PLAZA BUILDING
17117 W. NINE MILE RD.
SOUTHFIELD, Ml. 48075
Downriver office: 8415 Park Ave.
Allen Park, Ml 48101
(313) 381-0806
(248)559-2110
An injury
TO ONE IS
AN INJURY
TO ALL!
The members & officers of the
Transportation Communications
Union stand with the newspaper
workers in Detroit.
In SOLIDARITY!
Robert A. Scardelletti
international President
Local 600
Jerry Sullivan, President,
the Officers, Leadership,
Members, and Retirees
support the
locked-out
newspaper
workers.
Page 28 - [see page image]
PAGE 28
RATES
1 Week: $ 1 00 per word.
2 Weeks: $ 2°° per word.
3 Weeks: $ 3 00 per word.
4 Weeks: s 3 00 per word.
(10 WORD MINIMUM)
Classifieds
NOVEMBER 2, 1997
CALL
(313)964-5655
extension #120
& CHARGE IT!
MSA
In Memorium
Ike Krasner, 82, died suddenly of
heart failure on October 27. Fulbright
Scholar, beloved professor of count
less students at Wayne State
University’s School of Social Work,
Ike was devoted to his family —
wife Fay, daughter Beryl and son-in-
law David Bradley, and his extended
family that included dozens. Fie was
a steadfast fighter in numerous com
munity and national struggles, for
peace, justice and equality, and
never compromised his ideals and
values. Ike was one of the many who
were arrested for civil disobedience
in the Detroit Newspaper Strike. In
his retirement, Ike founded
Progressive Artists and Educators
Committee, and produced documen
taries on the Vietnam War protest
and on racial equality. Fie had a
great love and respect for human
beings, and is remembered for his
sly sense of humor and love of song.
Despite his physical discomfort, he
attended a conference on school
violence in Manchester, England
shortly before his death. A memorial
service is planned.
Margaret (Peggy) Swift, 62, died
Tuesday, Oct. 28, at Beverly Hills
Nursing Center, 16 months after
being diagnosed with Alzheimer's
disease. Peggy was born in St.
Louis, MO, on Jan. 18, 1935, and
moved to Detroit with her parents,
the late Eugene and Inez Betzold,
when she was a young child. In
1949, the family moved to St. Clair
Shores, where Peggy lived until
1996. She graduated in 1952 from
St. Gertrude High School and
worked for a time as a legal secre
tary. She married Jack Swift in 1955.
While on her honeymoon, she
learned of her mother's sudden death
and returned to her parents' home,
where she helped raise her five
younger siblings. Later, she started
her own family. She was a longtime
Girl Scout troop leader and an avid
bowler. From 1982 to 1996, she
worked as an office manager at Born
Center, an adult and special educa
tion facility in St. Clair Shores. She
was very active at St. Gertrude
Church, teaching religious education
classes and working as a parish sec
retary. Theater was her passion and
she performed in numerous plays
with the St. Gertrude Players. In the
early 1990s she was active in the
Tiger Stadium Fan Club. Peggy
loved parties, games, music, danc
ing, picnics, the Tigers, Lions, Red
Wings, Pistons and Wolverines.
Most of all she loved her family and
friends. Survivors include her chil
dren, Cindy Sause and Michael
Swift; her ex-husband Jack; her sis
ters Ann Hauanio, Jane Benard
and Patty Betzold; her brothers
Eugene (Gary) Betzold and
Michael Betzold, a Local 22 mem
ber, and many nieces and
nephews. Peggy’s first grandchild,
Sean Sause, was born Thursday, Oct.
30. The funeral was held Nov. 1.
Sylvia V. Tomczyk, 57 of
Beaverton, Ml passed away Friday,
October 17, 1997. She is survived
by her sons, Tom (Carolyn) of
Eastpointe, Joseph of New
Baltimore and Edward (Tammy) of
St. Clair Shores; daughters, Therese
(Jan) Oldsen and Pamela (Todd)
Kelly, both of Clinton Township;
mother Virginia Tomczyk of St. Clair
Shores; brothers, William (Dee) of
New Dallas, AZ, Nicholas, Joseph
(Carol) D’Andrea and Sam (Linda)
Rodriguez, all of Clinton Township;
sister Marilyn Wakula of Clinton
Township.; and seven grandchildren.
She was buried on Thursday,
October 23 in Resurrection
Cemetery in Clinton Township. She
will be missed by all.
Jack White, 85, a lifelong member
of the CPUSA, United Auto Workers
and later the Teamsters Union, died
October 28. He worked tirelessly in
the struggle for laboring women and
men in all walks of life. Jack was
involved in community and political
activism during his working life as a
truck driver, and on retirement
entered with his customary vigor the
struggle for the rights of seniors. His
strong ideology never wavered, and
he applied it to every facet of his
active life. He was cared for by his
devoted wife, Lois St. Aubin White,
and was honored and loved by his
daughters Nancy White, Kathy
Lamar and Pat Weaver, six grand
children and five great-grandchil
dren. A memorial service is planned
for December 14.
CELEBRATE
75 years of Workers
Education in America with
songs of labor and struggle,
featuring Labor’s Troubadour,
Joe Glazer.
Saturday, November 8,
8:30 p.m., St. Regis Hotel,
3071 W. Grand Blvd.
$5, students $3. Cash bar.
Panels on labor education
all day Saturday at
Reuther Archives, 5401 Cass.
Workers Education Local 189
Aids Awareness Week
Nov. 16th
Please join St. Timothy’s in worship for
Aids Awareness Sunday. We will host
“The Debate”, a play performed by
Lifeline Theater. Service starts at
11:00 a.m. with refreshments and
entertainment immediately following.
The play will begin promptly at 12:45
p.m. Come and check us out! The tar
get audience is young teen and adults.
St. Timothy United Methodist
Church
15888 Archdale, Detroit, Ml 48227
comer of Puritan and Archdale
1 block east of Southfield Fwy.
(313) 837-4070
St. Veronica
Fall Craft Show
Saturday and Sunday,
November 8-9,10 a.m-5 p.m.
21450 Universal at Toepfer
in Eastpointe, just east of Gratiot
Locked-out Workers,
ACOSS needs YOU
We are going into the neighbor
hoods on Saturdays at 10 a.m. We
meet at the Masco Tech picket line
at 15 Mile and Kelly, have a solidari
ty picket, then go door-to-door talk
ing to people about the strike. Come
join us for a couple of hours and par
ticipate in an action that does make
a difference.
Call the ACOSS Hotline
(810) 447-2716 for more information.
Support Masco Tech Strikers
15 Mile and Kelly, UAW 155
Home Local of Stephen Yokich
“An Injury to One is An Injury to AH”
“500 DAYS” CD
Cultural Workers and Artists Caucus
with Kris Peterson
Finland Station
Anne Feeney
Produced by Bob Vasseur
and Ellis Boal
$15 (+ $2 mailing)
All proceeds to Metro Council
of Newspaper Unions
Ordering: Phil Cangemi, Teamsters
2040, 2741 Trumbull, Detroit, Ml
48216 » http://members.aol.com/
dnarag/fivedael.html«
Birthdays
NOTE : The Detroit Sunday Journal reserves the right
to classify ads as we see lit. We also will change ads tor
spelling and grammar as long as it does not change the
intent ol the ad.
Announcements
LABOR PARTY FORUM
Thursday, November 13, 7 p.m.
Hear Ed Kornigay, National Trustee
of the Teamsters Union, member of
Teamsters National Black Caucus
and member of the National Council
of the Labor Party speak on:
“Why Teamsters Need
a Labor Party”
UAW Local 417
15 Mile and Stephenson
Sponsored by the Detroit Metro
Chapter of the Labor Party
(248) 748-6528
GEORGE WALDMAN — Happy
10-30 from the “older” 10-301!
Happy 2nd Birthday
Amber and Nathaniel
Grannie and Papa
To Randall (Joe)
To a wonderful son and brother
Happy 21st Birthday
We love you — Your family
Audrey is bodacious.
Her heart is truly spacious
Strikers, Rob and music fit.
And now we will all do our bit.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY AUDREY
Publications - Booksellers
BIG CITY BLUES Magazine
this month -
The Real Blues Brothers
Keepin’ the Blues alive
Call (313) 872-BLUE(S)
Health
ADMINISTRATOR
Jefferson East Business Association
seeks highly motivated individual
with Bachelor’s degree in Business
Management or related field and two
years experience to manage its
affairs and newly established
Business Development Center.
Send resume by Nov. 15:
Paulette Foster, President
Jefferson East Business Assn.
P.O. Box 15574
Detroit, Ml 48215
Baker’s Helper
Part-time, midnights,
10 p.m.-5 a.m. Will train.
Apply at Looney Baker
in Livonia,
13931 Farmington Road.
Driver for the Observer needed for
Troy or Birmingham areas. Must
have own vehicle. $60-$80 for 6
hours work per week. Cash pay.
Striker. Call Rick, (810) 286-9678.
Musician/Choir Director needed for
small Baptist church. Call (313) 824-
4307 after 5 p.m.
HELEN BERNICK
Get well soon!
Tom
“DEAD DOCTORS DON’T LIE”
T.J. Clark’s Original Mineral
Formula™. The best organic, col
loidal, trace mineral supplement
since 1925. Lowest prices!
Satisfaction guaranteed! Ask about
free delivery.
$19.95/qt., $60/gal.
Call Richard, (313) 584-7525
Help Wanted
Experienced Administrative Assistant
for local union office. Experienced
in the use of Windows 95, MS
Office 97. Excellent typing, written
and verbal skills. Contracted help.
Send resume to: John Henry
Davis, 405 Rivard, Detroit, 48207.
Bookstore
Stock position.
Part-time. Paid
vacations. Employee l/JT. 1 ]
discount. Major holidays “ ^
off. Apply in person.
1p.m.-6 p.m.
Tuesday, Nov. 4.
New Horizons Book Shop.
Roseville, Ml (810) 296-1560
Downtown Detroit Church
DIRECTOR OF OPEN DOOR SERVICES
Downtown church seeking full
time Director, responsible for
administration, supervision and
development of outreach ser
vices for homeless persons.
Responsibilities include pro
gram planning, grant-writing,
fund-raising, links to social ser
vice agencies, recruitment and
training of paid and volunteer
staff, food and clothing ser
vices. Qualifications include
education and experience com
mensurate with work responsi
bilities. Salary is negotiable.
Submit resume and list of three
references by December 1,
1997, to:
Search Committee
Director of Open Door Services
Fort Street Presbyterian Church
631 West Fort Street
Detroit, Ml 48226
An Equal Opportunity Employer
Business Opportunities
Local Vending Route for sale.
Established Troy-Warren locations.
Excellent part-time income.
$900/month or more. Only 10 hours a
week needed. Call (810) 577-0354.
Misc. for Sale
FULL SERVICE
Cable TV Descrambler, all makes
and models. (800) 652-2305
GOOD & PLENTY
RESALE SHOP^jpj—
Bedding, Twin/King. Dining room
sets with hutches, bedroom sets,
baby furniture. Winter coats and
snowsuits, newborn through
adult. 30-day layaway. Mon.-Sat.
10 a.m.-5 p.m.
22660 Van Dyke
3 blocks south of 9 Mile Rd.
(810) 754-7310
MERCHANDISER — Bulldog
Hardware Company has immedi
ate opening for part-time to full
time Merchandiser to service major
home improvement stores. Please
send inquiries to: Dave Young,
39500 14 Mile Road, Walled Lake,
Ml 48390.
Misc. Wanted
Old Wooden Duck Decoys
(810) 264-8849
Mixed Messages®
NOTE: The opinions expressed in Mixed
Messages are those of advertisers and do not
necessarily reflect Sunday Journal policies.
Dennis to Randy:
Just call me Marv.
Mike Betzold: You have our sympa
thy in the death of your sister. Your
locked-out brothers and sisters.
The Detroit Sunday Journal, 721
days without anyone being fired for
engaging in protected union activity!
Belleville/New Boston area
GET YOUR LAWN SIGNS
(313) 753-4033
Biff is flabbergasted by the momen
tary lapse in usually sound judge
ment that allowed his ad of two
weeks back to slip past the scissors
of that woman from Royal Oak who
dictates what will and won’t appear
on the classified ad pages of this
award-winning, family valued, scab-
scorning weekly publication.
Obscure references encouraged.
Viva Frank Zappa!
As if you needed to be reminded,
but.. .“Today and every day”,
NO News is good news!
To Unknown Teamster Local 372
person: Thank you for the stuffed
animals. W.I.L.D. Women
RIGHT should make MIGHT but too
often it does not — ORGANIZE and
BARGAIN.
To the Supporters of the W.I.L.D.
Women Bake Sale — Thank you
from the bottom of our hearts. The
children will have great parties
because of you! We couldn’t do it
without you. A Big Thank You!
W.I.L.D. Women.
Ellen Chase and Family:
Our prayers are with you.
Your W.I.L.D. Sisters
GROSSE POINTERS —
Help support the Locked-out
Newspaper Workers!
Cali our HOTLINE at (313) 222-
7654 for information and yard signs!
WAYNE COUNTY PURCHASING DIVISION
600 RANDOLPH STREET
DETROIT, MICHIGAN 48226
(313) 224-7796
INVITATION FOR BID
for
Purchase of Conveyor X-Ray Box Van
Inspection System
tor
Wayne County Department ot Airports
Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport
Romulus, Ml 48174
Bid Date: Tuesday, November 18,1997.
Time: 2:00 p.m.
Control #97-37-367
INVITATION FOR BID
for
Purchase ot High Security Programmable
Locks and Associated Hardware/Software
for
Wayne County Department of Airports
Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County.Airport
Romulus, Ml 48174
Bid Date: Monday, November 17,1997.
Time: 2:30 p.m.
Control #97-37-368
INVITATION FOR BID
for
Construction of a New Playscape, Picnic
Pavilion and Parking Lot Improvements
at
Northville Park
in
Northville Township, Michigan
for
Wayne County Department of
Public Services
Parks Division
Wayne County, Michigan
Bid Date: Tuesday, November 25,1997.
Time: 2:0.0 p.m.
Control #97-37-371
INVITATION FOR BID
for
Construction of a New Playscape, Picnic
Pavilion and Parking Lot Improvements
at
Cass Benton Park
in
Northville Township, Michigan
for
Wayne County Department ot Public
Services
Parks Division
Wayne County, Michigan
Bid Date: Wednesday, November 26,1997.
Time: 2:00 p.m.
Control #97-37-369
UAW Local 985 supports the
Locked-Out Newspaper
Workers in their quest for a
fair and decent contract.
Carl Bantau, President
Al Przydzial, Vice-President
U.A.W. Local 2093 -
The power of UNION is found in
WE, not ME. We support the
newspaper workers in their quest
for a fair and equitable contract. -
Three Rivers American Axle
and Mfg. Facility.
The Officers, Members and
Retirees of UAW Local 909
support the
Locked-out Newspaper Workers.
We encourage all working people
to continue not to purchase
scab papers or USA Today.
Congratulations Audrey and Rob —
Love on the line is made to last.
— Your Sunday Journal Friends
“The proper role of the press,”'
Richard McCord argues, “is to
REPORT ethical, moral and legal
wrongdoing, not COMMIT it.” Get the
book now and find out what Gannett
thinks “freedom of the press" means.
Send $27.45 (made payable to Metro
Council of Newspaper Unions) to:
The Detroit Sunday Journal, 450 W.
Fort, Detroit, Ml 48226. Attn: Chain
Gang. Include name and address
you want it sent to. -The Chain
Gang, One Newspaper versus the
Gannett Empire.
Lock-out Headquarters in desper
ate need of a Vacuum and throw
rugs. Will pick-up (313) 965-2347,
ask for Larry S.
To the Devil in the Blue Dress:
I pray that the Guardian Angels are
looking over you. Get Well Soon
— W.I.L.D. Ladies
FREE LAWN SIGNS DELIVERED!
Downriver area. (313) 284-1804
Cold weathers nips, Biff and Mimi
need a contract and a Fez with
earflaps. Bloomington Biff
GENE AUSTIN and JAN TUTOR
from UAW 594 support the Locked-
out Newspaper Workers.
Sandy Rosen has been sung around
here for a while now, but it’s nice to
know everyone appreciates her!
Congratulations Sandy on your Jobs
with Justice award! From the
Barbarian and the rest of the warriors.
Pets
AKITA MIX, neutered male,
approximately 1 year young —
(charming temperament, eager to
please). Application and adoption
fee. (248) 680-1426.
LOST DOG 9/10/97. Vernor-
Dix area in Detroit. Black male lab,
medium size, blue/green collar
with bones pictured on it. Answers
to “Charlie”. $50 reward.
(313) 842-6556.
Last call.
Mature, friendly beagle needs new
home. I am unable to keep him
anymore. Next stop may have to
be the Humane Society. Can you
help? Call Jim at (313) 869-8058.
Real Estate
Apartments for Rent
Studio and 1-bedroom, S.W. Detroit.
All utilities. (248) 559-8169
Page 29 - [see page image]
NOVEMBER 2, 1997
PAGE 29
Property for Sale
19 acres, by striker. East China
schools, well, irrigation pond. Sylvia,
agent, at (810) 566-2300.
Hall for Rent
UAW Local 247. For all occasions.
15 Mile and Van Dyke area.
(810) 264-2945
Real Estate Agents
Ralph Gammon
West Side Real Estate Needs
(313) 937-2300 or (313) 325-8433
Free home warranty to union members
BUYING OR SELLING A HOME?
Use a union brother, also a Locked-
out Newspaper Worker specializing
in Oakland and Macomb counties
and East Side Detroit.
Call Bob DeMoss, (810) 979-1600
Financial Services
FAST CASH HOME LOANS
Good credit — Bad Credit
NO PROBLEM
Michigan’s Oldest Credit
Service Organization
Equity Funding and Associates
$250 Discount available for union
brothers and sisters.
Call today and ask for locked-out
union brother Bob Horvath.
(248) 932-3040 ext. 311
How to avoid the 10 biggest mis
takes when buying a home and
getting a mortgage. 26 page
report! $6 plus $1.70 postage and
handling. Send to N.M.A.C., P.O.
Box 19386, Detroit, Ml 48219.
$ Immediate Cash $
for Homes
Let union brother and
locked-out newspaper
worker help you meet all
your Real Estate needs.
We BUY
SELL
LIST
& MANAGE
All real estate in the
Metro Detroit area
Call Mr. Rose today at
S&R Rose Investments
(248) 557-0200
(over 20 years experience)
Used Vehicles
Chrysler/Plymouth
1970 Plymouth Fury III runs good,
needs right rear 1/4 panel. $550
o.b.o. (810) 751-5481.
Ford
1983 Ford 3/4 (extended) ton van.
Runs good. $1200 or trade for
another van plus 2 free dogs for a
good home. Labrador and a mutt.
G.M.
1990 Chevy Lumina Euro. V-6, air,
pwr locks/windows. AM/FM/ cas
sette. 109,00 miles. Looks and runs
excellent. $3500. (248) 541-7075.
1990 Buick Century 4 Dr, 142,000
miles. Almost full power, clean,
new exhaust, new shocks. Drivins’
Believin’! $2350. Call:
(248) 344-0469
1989 Cadillac Seville, looks and
drives like new. 70K miles. $7450.
(810) 758-4849.
1987 Pontiac Firebird. 120,000
miles. Clean, runs good. CD/power
windows/locks, sunroof. $1800.
(810) 598-8243.
1984 Olds Toronado,
looks and runs well. $1000, o.b.o.
(810) 758-4849
Auto Parts Wanted
Wanted: Chevy Corsica with bench
seat. Ask for Nick. (313) 728-3580.
Campers/Trailers/RV’s
Hunting Camp. 20-ft. travel trailer.
$1200 o.b.o. Call (810) 792-4846.
Auto - Sales Reps.
Thinking of Buying or
Leasing a New or Used
Car or Truck?
Use a Locked-out Newspaper Union
brother. Call Ray Frusciano at Royal
Oak Ford. (248) 544-6561.
D.T.U. Local 18 extends
our sympathy to the
family of Barbara Moline,
wife of retired secretary-
treasurer Jack Moline,
who died
Thursday, October 30
Forget
to
^Legal Services^
ELLIS BOAL
925 Ford Building, Detroit
(313) 962-2770
EllisBoal@aol.com
Bankruptcy
$195 Total Attorney Fee
(810) 398-5000
Former U.A.W. Attorney
LAW OFFICES OF
JANADIA & JANADIA
Union friendly attorneys
Criminal — Personal injury
Wayne and Macomb counties only
(810)776-0810
Sheila Hughes
407 E. Fort Street, Suite 410
(313) 961-2900
PAUL H. STEVENSON
Attorney at Law
Criminal Defense, Personal Injury
4632 2nd Ave.
Call (313) 833-6868
Service Directory
Business Services
Gerald Baskerville and Co.
Accounting and Tax Service since
1942. At Livernois exit of I-75.
We cover all accounting needs
for new and old businesses.
(313) 842-2336 FAX (313) 842-2535.
LeiLyn Hughes Communications
Internet advertising and consulting
for all your internet needs.
(248) 543-9774 or
e-mail @ www.LeiLynH@aol.com
★ WEDDING INVITATIONS ★
All items discounted. Sampled
albums delivered. 20-album choice.
Call Agnes E. Johnson
(810) 588-3764
Maintenance & Repair
Baxter & Co.
Plumbing, electric, drywall, paint
ing, gutters, and brick work.
Call Donald Brintley,
(313) 567-8408; (313) 934-8907.
Sewing Machine Service
Tune-up special in your home,
$29.95. All makes, all ages, all parts
stocked. 38 years experience.
Call (313) 885-7437
or call toll-free 1 (800) 810-7437
UNCLE BUCK’S
CARPET CLEANING
NW suburbs. 20% discount on all
upholstery. $12.95 per room. Call
today (248) 360-0080. 19-year
Locked-out Newspaper Worker.
VINCE FURNARI CEMENT
Repair work or new construction
driveway, porches, patio sidewalks.
Call for a free estimate, licensed
and insured, eastside, some west.
(810) 465-5172
STRIKELINE SERVICES
There is still time to protect your
deck from the ravages of winter.
Power washing and deck restora
tion. Reasonable, references,
west-side. Locked-out Newspaper
Worker. (313) 408-0685.
Painting
Misc. Services
JT’S PAINTING AND
HANDYMAN SERVICE
Interior and exterior painting, power
washing, gutter cleaning, fall clean
ing. Free estimates, senior dis
counts. (810) 791-4165.
PAINTING - WOODY’S PAINT
& HANDYMAN SERVICES
Free estimates for many types
of home repair. Professional
indoor/outdoor painting. Locked-out
Newspaper Worker - (313) 941-1063
Interior Painting by Mike D. Good
work, good rates. (313) 425-3414.
A-1 PAINTING QUALITY WORK
Reasonable rates, free estimates,
references. Western Wayne and
Oakland counties. Call Mark at
(313) 531-7824.
BUD’S PAINTING
Quality work at reasonable prices.
References available. Interior and
Exterior. (810) 977-2941.
MORE VIDEO
VIDEOGRAPHER
Specializing in weddings, Bar
Mitzvahs and any other special
occasions Call John at:
(810) 979-2919
Affordable Auto Repair
Specialize in Transmissions
West side Detroit
Kim Clements (313) 271-5478
There Arose Such A Clatter...
Seasonal Indoor/Outdoor
Decorating, Holiday Wreaths.
Parties. UAW member.
Call Jeff Mayer at (248) 674-9588
Services — Adult
TAWNY’S SECRET FANTASIES!
Exquisitely Erotic
Live, Personal, Unhurried
Lingerie and Free Photos
(248) 615-1300 $1.99 min.
(900) 993-8553 $3.99 min.
You Light Up My Face” by Merl Reagle
■
10/26/97
m
ACROSS
46
How cigar bars
80
Out of jail
list their cigars?
81
A Gershwin
1
Russians, e.g.
52
drugs
83
‘JBreathe easier
6
Juniper juice
53
Sgt., e.g.
org.
9
Crunch
54
Excited
84
Adjust slightly
13
Narrows
55
Chaplin ending
86
Clique of cigar
19
Closed a deal.
57
Cigar historian’s
bar regulars
perhaps
nickname?
from Florida?
21
Melville tale
60
Take forcibly
91
Emirate on a
22
More island
63
Nation N of
peninsula
23
Name for a
Havana
93
Paper amount
cigar bar?
64
Scaleless fish
96
Cancel
25
Preacher’s
65
Vanishing sound
97
On (doing
admonition
68
Son of Aphrodite
great)
26
Conjuring prop
69
Laughingstock
99
Purchase a
27
Root or Yale
70
Marty in Young
Tiparillo?
28
Portent
Frankenstein
104
Iranian money
30
Mind factor
73
Name of the
105
Have
31
Leb. neighbor
tobacco store
(check out)
33
Authority on
next to the cigar
106
Sash for Sato
cigars?
bar?
107
Cigar bar
38
Extinct N.Z. bird
77
Satiate
emanation?
41
Ron Carey, for
78
Capek play
112
Some rtes.
one
79
68 Across
114
RNs’ org.
45
Therefore
backward
115
Conway’s twit
DOWN
European duck
Pinatubo output
Yemen city
Otello fellow
"When”
preceder
II
116 Evocative of the
’70s, e.g.
120 Bit of help
124 Coterie
127 Actress who
hand-rolls her
own coronas?
131 That one, to
Abner
132 Mr. Bates
133 Scold
134 Some photo
enlargements
135 Calendar abbr.
136 Meg, to Jennifer
137 Slow, in music
Newspaper
comic?
Et (and
others)
Cambodian
capital, partly
Corn center
Asian river, the
Darya
Writer Chaim
12 Words of denial
13 Join the NFL, e.g.
14 Stopped hunger
15 Weasel sound?
16 Fencing swords
17 Pete’s
replacement
18 Suppressed
20 Sound feature
24 Relish
29 German donkey
(from which we
get a word for a
type of stand)
32 Fire on from
aircraft
34 Prelude to star or
bucks
35 In the first place:
abbr.
36 Palm Beach birds
37 Fishing props
38 It means
“wrongly”
39 The Jeffersons
theme, “Movin’
40 Org. co-founded
by Helen Keller
42 Blyth and Miller
43 Apple varieties?
44 McCoys hit,
“Hang On, ”
47 House bid
48 Dairy “worker”
49 Concur
50 Part of 61 Down
51 Actress Rene
56 A piece of cake
58 Macaroni shape
59 It may leak
61 Feminist cause of
the ’70s
62 Oprah in The
Color Purple
“ little girl!”
67 Worry
70 War zone of
January 1991
Solzhenitsyn
topic
72 Get windy,
perhaps
66
71
74 Fail tail?
75 Long
76 Crude shelter
77 Where Aida
debuted
79 Hardship
82 Like Scorsese
films, usually
85 Case alternative,
beer-wise
87 School cafeteria
buy
88 Mdse, stores on
army bases
89 Thumbs-down
90 Facile
92 Gillette razor
94 Jai
95 Salsa rating
98 Kauai keepsake
100 Firefighter props
101 Pastiche
102 It’s human
103 Goat antelopes
(anagram of
W.E. ROSS)
107 Cereus topics?
108 Marriage, e.g.
109 Simpson and
Starr
110 Killer whales
111 Case for Mulder
and Scully
113 Sun block of a
sort
117 Runs out
118 Actress Garr
(and a crossword
fan, too)
119 Bread choices
121 Bath’s river
122 One of Tip’s
successors
123 Bond classic
125 Cigar-smoking
revolutionary
126 Allow
128 Opening
129 Busy bug
130 Course for
immigrants: abbr.
Solution on page 30
* GIFT GIVERS! To
order any of Merl's
cross word collections,
send $10 per hook
(checks only, payable
to “Pazz.leWorks") to:
Crosswords, P.O. Box
15066-D, Tampa FL
336B4. Please specify
Vol. 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5.
Page 30 - [see page image]
PAGE 30
NOVEMBER 2, 1997
mm
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a
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THE CHAIN GANG
Read
it
now!
You can pick up your
copy at the Council of
Unions Headquarters,
450 W. Fort, Detroit
Total for one book by mail. Locked out workers with I.D. get $10 off.
To order, send check or money order made payable to: Metropolitan Council of
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Union Local Print clearly. Please allow 2 weeks for delivery
Page 31 - [see page image]
NOVEMBER 2, 1997
THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL
PAGE 31
Sunday wrap
This week
Sun. Mon. Tue. Wed. Thu. Fri.
2 3 4 5 6 7
Sat.
8
G.B.
8:00
7
ANA.
3:00
FOX-C
CAR.
7:30
50
PITT.
7:30
FOX-C
N.Y.
6:00
50
ATL.
7:30
FOX-C
IND.
7:30
FOX-C
ORL.
8:00
50
PSU
3:30
ABC
PUR.
12:30
ESPN
Home games are shaded
WESTERN CONFERENCE
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Central
w
L
T
Pts Atlantic
W
L
T
Pts
DETROIT
10
1
2
22 Washington
7
4
1
15
St. Louis
10
2
2
22 Philadelphia
7
5
1
15
Dallas
9
4
1
19 New Jersey
7
4
0
14
Phoenix
5
5
2
12 NY Islanders
5
5
2
12
Toronto
3
6
2
8 NY Rangers
3
6
5
11
Chicago
3
10
0
6 Florida
3
6
3
9
Pacific
W
L
T
Pts Tampa Bay
2
9
2
6
Colorado
7
2
5
19 Northeast
W
L
T
Pts
Anaheim
5
4
4
14 Ottawa
8
3
3
19
Los Angeles
4
5
4
12 Pittsburgh
7
5
2
16
Edmonton
5
6
1
11 Boston
7
5
1
15
San Jose
4
8
0
8 Montreal
6
4
2
14
Calgary
3
8
2
8 Carolina
3
7
3
9
Vancouver
3
8
2
8 Buffalo
3
7
2
8
1H n
HP
Player
A PTS PIM
Lidstrom
5
10
15
2
Yzerman
5
6
11
6
Murphy
2
9
11
4
Kozlov
5
5
10
8
Shanahan
4
6
10
6
Larionov
2
8
10
14
Lapointe
4
5
9
8
McCarty
3
6
9
21
Brown
5
3
8
4
Gilchrist
4
3
7
10
Dandenault
3
4
7
19
Knuble
3
2
5
6
Draper
2
3
5
6
Fetisov
2
3
5
16
Ward
1
3
4
8
Pushor
0
4
4
24
Rouse
0
3
3
8
Kocur
1
1
2
6
Holmstrom
0
2
2
6
Eriksson
0
1
1
2
Osgood
0
0
0
2
Goalie
W
L
T
GAA
Sa%
Osgood
8
1
2
1.84
.931
Hodson
2
0
0
2.22
.924
SEPTEMBER
13 COLORADO' '
20 BAYLOR
27 NOTRE DAME
OCTOBER
4 at Indiana
11 N’WESTERN
18 IOWA
25 at Michigan St.
NOVEMBER
W, 27-3
W, 38-3
W, 21-14
107rr
W, 23-6
W, 28-24
W, 23-7
1 MINNESOTA'
8 at Penn State
15 at Wisconsin
22 OHIO STATE ABC
ABC
3:30
2:00
Noon
(H) Homecoming
All games on WJR (760 AM)
SEPTEMBER
Through Thursday
NOTE: NHL standings
through Thursday
night’s games.
29
PENN STATE ABC
ning
WXYT i
Noon
(H) Homecominc
All games on WXYT (1270 AM)
PRESEASON
1 ATLANTA
8 CINCINNATI
17 at Pittsburgh
21 at Indianapolis
REGULAR SEASON
AUGUST
31 ATLANTA
SEPTEMBER
7 ^TAMPA BAY"
14 at Chicago
21 at New Orleans
28 GREEN BAY
OCTOBER
5 at Buffalo
12 at Tampa Bay
W20TT 19 N.Y. GIANTS
L, 27-23 26 Bye Week
L, 28-20 NOVEMBER
L, 16-3 2 at Green Bay
9 at Washington
16 MINNESOTA
23 INDIANAPOLIS
27 CHICAGO
DECEMBER
7 at Miami ESPN# 8:00
14 at Minnesota Fox 1:00
21 N.Y. JETS NBC 1:00
# Nationally televised
L, '22-13 All games on WXYT (1270 AM)
W, 28-17
L, 24-17
W, 32-7
L, 35-17
W, 26-15
W, 27-9
L, 26-20 (OT)
ESPN# 8:00
Fox 1:00
Fox 1:00
NBC 1:00
Fox#12:30
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
6 W. MICHIGAN
W, 42-10
13 MEMPHIS
W, 51-21
20 At Notre Dame
W, 23-7
OCTOBER
4 MINNESOIA(H)
W, 31-10" '
11 at Indiana
W, 38-6
18 at Northwestern
L, 19-17
25 MICHIGAN
L, 23-7
NOVEMBER
1 OHIO SI.
8 at Purdue
2:00
22 at Illinois
2:00
Central
W
L
Pet.
Green Bay
6
2
.750
Minnesota
6
2
.750
Tampa Bay
5
3
.625
DETROIT
4
4
.500
Chicago
1
7
.125
East
W
L
Pet.
New York
6
3
.667
Dallas
4
4
.500
Philadelphia
4
4
.500
Washington
4
4
.500
Arizona
1
7
.125
West
W
L
Pet.
San Francisco
7
1
.875
Carolina
4
4
.500
St. Louis
2
6
.250
New Orleans
2
7
.222
Atlanta
1
7
.125
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W
L
Pet.
Miami
5
3
.625
New England
5
3
.625
New York
5
3
.625
Buffalo
4
4
.500
Indianapolis
0
8
.000
Central
W
L
Pet.
Pittsburgh
6
2
.750
Jacksonville
5
3
.625
Baltimore
4
4
.500
Tennessee
4
4
.500
Cincinnati
1
7
.125
West
W
L
Pet.
Denver
7
1
.875
Kansas City
6
2
.750
Seattle
5
3
.625
San Diego
4
4
.500
Oakland
3
5
.375
Today’s Games
Detroit at Green Bay (-10), 8 p.m.
Washington (-3) at Chicago, 1 p.m.
St. Louis at Atlanta (-3), 1 p.m.
New England at Minnesota (even), 1 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Indianapolis (-4V), 1 p.m.
Oakland at Carolina (-3), 1 p.m.
Miami at Buffalo (-2), 1 p.m.
San Diego at Cincinnati (even), 1 p.m.
Baltimore at N.Y. Jets (-5), 1 p.m.
Dallas at San Francisco (-6'*), 4 p.m.
Philadelphia (-4) at Arizona, 4 p.m.
Jacksonville (-1) at Tennessee, 4 p.m.
Seattle at Denver (-9), 4 p.m.
Monday's Game
Pittsburgh at Kansas City (-3), 9 p.m.
Point spread as of Friday
Rushing
Player
Att
Yd
Avg.
TD
Sanders
163
893
5.5
3
Vardell
17
58
3.4
1
Mitchell
22
40
1.8
1
Rivers
11
40
3.6
0
Morton
1
20
20.0
0
Schlesinger
2
2
1.0
0
Receiving
Player
No
Yd
Avg.
TD
Moore
57
804
14.1
4
Morton
34
456
13.4
3
Sanders
18
195
10.8
3
Sloan
12
86
7.2
0
Metzelaars
11
70
6.4
0
Vardell
9
121
13.4
0
Milburn
4
73
18.3
0
Schlesinger
3
35
11.7
0
Chryplewicz
3
27
9.0
0
Boyd
2
38
19.0
0
Passing
Player
Cmp
Att
Yds TD
Int
Mitchell
153
265
1905 11
6
Interceptions
Player
No
Yd
Avg.
TD
Brown
2
83
41.5
2
Carrier
2
0
0.0
0
Raymond
1
17
17.0
0
Porcher
1
5
5.0
0
Boyd
1
4
4.0
0
Bailey
1
0
0.0
0
Jeffries
1
0
0.0
0
Malone
1
-5
-5.0
0
Scoring
Piayer
FG
PAT
Pts
Hansen
16-17
18-18
66
Punting
Player
No
Avg.
LG
Solidarity Forever
MICHIGAN
FEDERATION OF
TEACHERS &
SCHOOL
RELATED
PERSONNEL
AFT • AFL-CIO
2661 East Jefferson Avenue • Detroit Michigan 48207
★ PROGRESS FOR ALL ★
Local 223, Along with Thousands of Working People
Across the Country, Strongly Support the Heroic
Efforts of the Detroit Newspaper Workers and Their
Families. We Strongly believe in JUSTICE, FAIR
NESS, AND THE RIGHT OF A FREE PRESS.
Donald G. Smith
President - The
Executive Board, Staff
and membership of
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No. 299
Supports the Newspaper Workers
in their labor dispute
A Councilman
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ir Commitment
★ Integrity
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*IRANK
DETROIT CITY COUNCIL
[7f VOTE November 4,1997
Paid for by Committee to Elect Frank Hayden to the Detroit City Council, 17377
Livernois, Detroit, Michigan 48221, (313) 345-6199, Marcia Hayden, Treasurer.
LINCOLN PARK
FIRE FIGHTERS
POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE
1997 CANDIDATE ENDORSEMENTS
THE MEMBERS OF THE LINCOLN PARK FIRE FIGHTERS POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE
ENDORSE THE FOLLOWING CANDIDATES RUNNING IN THE 1997
CITY OF LINCOLN PARK GENERAL ELECTION:
CITY
CLERK:
DONNA
BREEDING
CITY
TREASURER
DOROTHY
WEST
STEVE
VIRGINIA
BROWN
MONDON
RONALD
WILLIAM
DePALMA
SUZORE
HARRY
REBECCA
KLAFT
TEA
Jett
43
43.1
60
This ad paid lor by the Lincoln Park Fire Fighters Political Action Committee.
“Not authorized by the candidate committees of Frank Sail, Donna Breeding, Dorothy West,
Hrnu.n Ronald Dc-Palma Harrv Klaft. Virginia Mondon, William Suzore, Rebecca Tea”
Page 32 - [see page image]
wm
Journal photo by REBECCA COOK
PAGE 32 THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL NOVEMBER 2, 1997
Wings only statement is they’re good
Louis Arena. The Sharks clogged up
the neutral zone and clutched and
grabbed at will while the Wings gave
up far too many scoring chances. But
Larry Murphy’s goal 45 seconds into
the third period broke a 3-3 tie and
the Wings held on to the lead.
“We’re fortunate to have a pretty
good record. But we realize we’re not
doing anything great,” said Doug
Brown. “We’ve got a long way to go as
a team. I think it’s a good sign that
we know we’re not playing to the best
of our ability.”
One reason the Wings haven’t been
tested in victory is their early-season
schedule. Only three opponents (Ana
heim, Dallas and St. Louis) have win
ning records. Detroit’s next challenge
won’t likely come until Nov. 11, when
Colorado comes to Joe Louis Arena.
So far the Wings have just worn
down opponents by rolling four effec
tive lines on and off the ice. Their
scoring has been so balanced it’s
almost ridiculous. Eleven different
players have at least seven points
and 10 have at least three goals.
“We’re getting contributions from
everywhere, which bodes well down
the road,” said Murphy. “You don’t
want to be in a situation where
you’re depending on just one or two
guys.”
One area of concern for the future,
and the most tangible evidence of
Konstantinov’s loss, is the number of
shots on goals and scoring chances
Detroit is allowing. The Wings are
giving up 29 shots per game, up from
the 27.7 shots they allowed last sea
son.
More so than shots, the number of
scoring chances allowed has in
creased drastically. Osgood and
Hodson will have to continue their
outstanding play for the Wings to
continue winning.
“We’re finding a way to win ‘em.
It’s a good situation,” said Darren
McCarty after Wednesday night’s
game. “But we’ve got to get back to
playing 60 minutes of hockey.”
Briefly
Kirk Maltby, out since the exhibi
tion season with a separated shoul
der, could return in a week or so.
Fast start
Detroit is
confident
I t seems the Red Wings haven’t
missed a beat since last June’s
Stanley Cup Finals sweep over
Philadelphia.
Their 10-1-2 record going into
Friday night’s game against the Los
Paul
Harris
Angeles Kings at Joe Louis Arena
was the NHL’s best.
Their 51 goals were tops in the
league, as were the combined goals-
against average (1.90) and save per
centage (.929) of goaltenders Chris
Osgood and Kevin Hodson. Detroit’s
power play was the league’s third-
best at 21.1 percent and its penalty
killing was No. 1 at 92.5 percent.
It almost seems like the team is
making a statement that it can still
flourish after losing defenseman
Vladimir Konstantinov, injured in a
June 13 limousine crash; Mike
Vernon, traded to San Jose; and
restricted free agent Sergei Fedorov,
a holdout. Then there’s the hangover
which usually afflicts the defending
Stanley Cup champions. There’s no
sign of one with the Wings.
The players deny having any extra
incentive.
“I don’t know if we’re making a
statement. I just think we’re playing
good hockey,” said Aaron Ward.
Joe Kocur expanded on the idea.
“I don’t think we’re making a
statement, I just think we’re playing
as hard as we can,” he said. “I know
what you’re getting at, but what we
did last year doesn’t matter this year
- in this dressing room it doesn’t. It
matters to other teams. It’s a differ
ent year.”
First-year General Manager Ken
sparked the Wings' 4-3 victory over San Jose.
have a workmanlike attitude.”
The Wings are even managing to
do just enough to win when they
don’t play all that well, as was the
case in Wednesday night’s 4-3 victory
over Vernon and the Sharks at Joe
With a goal and an assist, Darren McCarty
Holland has his own explanation for
his team’s success so far this season.
“I think the last couple of years,
guys have learned how to get ready
for games,” he said.
“They don’t beat themselves. They
Rockers expect better times, and a playoff berth, this season
By Mike Madias
and Ellen Hildreth
Special to the Journal
Hockeytown won’t become soccer
city any time soon, but Detroit
Rockers player-coach Pato Margetic is
going into the 1997-98 season with a
slight limp and an optimistic outlook.
The Rockers played their first
National Professional Soccer League
home game against Edmonton
Saturday night at Joe Louis Arena.
This is the team’s eighth season in
Detroit and second at the Joe.
The season already got off to a good
start when the Rockers won their sea
son opener in Montreal, 9-7, on Oct.
25. Jeff Gold scored the winning goal
and Bryan “The Goose” Finnerty had
16 saves in the Rockers’ goal.
Last season was a heartbreaker for
Rockers fans. The team won its first
five home games, but after an 8-3
start, injuries started to take their
toll. Margetic, star goalie Finnerty,
NPSL Rookie of the Year Jason Willan
and Jay White were all sidelined at
one point.
“The indoor game is so hard on the
players that stress injuries will come,”
said Margetic, whose uneven gait bore
out his words.
The Rockers lost 10 of 13 at one
point, but rallied to finish 20-20. They
were one game short of qualifying for
the playoffs.
“We’ll make the playoffs this season
because our heart is in it and because
it is our time,” said Margetic.
This season the team features two
new faces in goal: Andrew Kralik,
acquired from the Florida Strikers of
the United States Indoor Soccer
League, and rookie Matt Tudor.
There are also two young players -
Lovelace Akwahsicah and Roland
Oppong-Agaye - who played on
Ghana’s national outdoor soccer team
as teen-agers. Neither has suited up
for Detroit - they are both in the
process of obtaining work visas.
The Rockers picked up two players
in the supplemental draft from the
Continental Indoor Soccer League -
Jaime Flores of Monterrey and Maxi-
milliano Viera of Arizona.
Page 33 - [see page image]
NOVEMBER 2, 1997
THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL
PAGE 33
Journal photo by REBECCA COOK
Briarwood
OPEN SATURDAY
Defense gives Wolverines chance for Rose Bowl
HENNING, From Page 36
It’s a key reason why Michigan can
afford now to blitz in a fashion
unheard of during Bo’s time.
What it means heading into No
vember is that the Wolverines look
like an awfully good bet to punch out
both Penn State and Ohio State.
Their defense is that good. Their
offense is adequate.
Michigan would also figure to have
a better time in the Rose Bowl, if
that, in fact, happens, because U-M’s
defense isn’t vulnerable to the kind of
West Coast speed game and pass
attack that used to get Schembechler
teams in trouble.
This is a grown-up, state-of-the-art
defensive football team. It looks like
a match for anybody else in the coun
try. It’s tough to assume an unbeaten
November, but two months of making
mincemeat of everyone else is con
vincing. No Michigan team over the
past 25 years has looked this good on
defense and still had enough offense
to put a good team away.
■Assorted stars - on and off the
field - make for a memorable
World Series.
There were a couple of sloppy
games in Cleveland, when it was dif
ficult to tell whether this was the Fall
Classic or the Winter Olympics.
But for those of us who found our
selves glued beyond the norm to this
World Series, a few attractions stood
out - beyond the sensational baseball
that was played in Games 6 and 7.
Jim Leyland, for starters.
Tigers fans might reflect back to
1979. During spring training that
year in Lakeland, Fla., a luncheon
discussion took place with a Tigers
insider who confirmed that the new
manager, Les Moss, probably would
n’t be around long.
His successor was going to be the
34-year-old guy at Evansville (then
the Triple-A stop) who some of us
were aware of: Jim Leyland.
What happened, of course, is that -
true to predictions - Moss lasted
eight weeks as manager. The Tigers
pulled the trigger primarily because
they realized a temporarily unem
ployed Sparky Anderson would not
be around long enough to allow Moss
the chance to prove his obvious inad
equacy over a fairer stretch of time.
So in one sense, not only did Moss
get chopped by Anderson in June
1979, but the bright young guy wait
ing in the wings - Leyland - was also
knocked out of the Tigers job. That
one of the best managerial minds in
the game finally got a Series ring
with Florida was a major plus from a
surprisingly memorable ’97 Series.
Linebacker Sam Sword and the rest of U-M’s defense made it tough for Michigan State tailback Sedrick Irvin to find running room.
Woodson might not win Heisman, but he’s the best player
ADAMS, From Page 36
leaped into the air, grabbed MSU
quarterback Todd Schultz’s pass with
one hand, then came down with one
tip-toe in bounds before falling out of
bounds, was a thing of beauty for
most observers. It was nothing spe
cial to the teammates who watch him
in practice every day.
“When I saw it, my heart dropped
out and I said, ‘Oh my gosh,’ ” said U-
M linebacker Sam Sword. “But we
expect things like that. Charles
makes those kind of plays all the
time in practice.”
“It’s frustrating to go against him
in practice because he knows all of
our routes,” said U-M tailback Chris
Howard. “He’ll pick off a pass, then
he’ll go screaming and yelling down
the field, but it’s all in fun.
“He’s unbelievable. He’s an aggres
sive competitor that plays all out.
Any guy like that is tough to handle.”
Wolverines fans had better enjoy
Woodson while they can. It’s unlikely
he will be back for his senior season.
Draft expert Mel Kiper Jr. rates
Woodson No. 1 for the 1998 draft,
saying he’s the only collegian who
can make an immediate NFL impact.
One pro scout said Woodson was bet
ter than either Shawn Springs of
Seattle or Detroit’s Bryant West
brook, both top-five picks in April.
“I don’t have a vote for the Heis
man, but if the Heisman Trophy is
for the best football player in this
country, then he deserves consider
able consideration,” Carr said of
Woodson at Monday’s news luncheon.
Woodson was motivated to play
well at MSU because Spartan
Stadium was the site of one of his
worst games. As a freshman, he bob-
bled a potential game-saving inter
ception, then saw the ball carom off
him and get swiped away by MSU’s
Derrick Mason. That set up the score
that gave MSU a 28-25 victory.
“I had a bad experience here my
freshman year, but now I’ve got that
bad taste out of my mouth,” Woodson
said. “We came up here, I didn’t make
the play and we didn’t win.
“I have to make big plays. Anytime
it comes my way I want the ball.”
He proved that by yanking the ball
away from teammate Marcus Ray for
his second interception, on a play
MSU had tried against Woodson ear
lier, without success.
“I was insulted they ran the same
play on me twice,” said Woodson.
The Spartans learned their lesson
the hard way, or as Carr put it: “The
greatest players have their greatest
games in the biggest games.”
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Page 34 - [see page image]
PAGE 34
THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL
NOVEMBER 2, 1997
Journal photo by REBECCA COOK
Tommy Vardell has worked hard to improve his blocking since he joined the Lions.
Vardell finds
happiness as
Lions’ fullback
By Joe Adams
Journal Sports Editor
He isn’t called “Touchdown Tommy”
any more, but that’s understandable -
Tommy Vardell has only scored eight
touchdowns in six pro seasons.
You can call him healthy, something
he couldn’t say in Cleveland. You can
also call him happy, something he
wasn’t last season in San Francisco.
Going into tonight’s game at Green
Bay (8 p.m., Channel 7; WXYT, 1270
AM), Vardell finds himself in the best
position of his career - as a solid start
ing fullback for the Lions.
“I think the Lions are a little more
comfortable with me now,” said Var
dell, who has run for 58 yards and
caught nine passes. “I’m doing what
I’ve always done - a little blocking, a
little receiving, a little running.”
Lions coach Bobby Ross pursued
Vardell, 28, on the recommendation of
quarterbacks coach Marc Trestman,
who knew Vardell when both were on
the 49ers last season. The 6-foot-2,
230-pound Vardell was a former No. 1
draft pick, but knee surgery cut short
his Browns career and an ankle injury
hampered him in San Francisco, so he
was no sure solution for the Lions’
problems at fullback.
“I had a good season in San
Francisco but it was a money thing
with them,” Vardell said. “I wasn’t con
vinced I wanted to stay there, either.
William Floyd was coming back from
an injury and he’s their guy. Coach
Trestman knew what I could do and
he told Coach Ross about me.”
“We thought he was a first-rounder
when he was drafted,” Ron Hughes,
Lions’ vice-president of player person-
Traveling Gordon
By Christopher M. Singer
Journal Staff Writer
Following last Monday’s rain date at
Rockingham, N.C., NASCAR Winston
Cup crews had to return to their shops
in the Charlotte, N.C., area, unload
Rockingham equipment from their
transporters, load Phoenix equipment
and head straight for Phoenix Inter
national Raceway, about 23 miles
north of the city, for today’s Dura-Lube
500 (2 p.m., TNN).
Phoenix is a difficult one-mile oval
where the Winston Cup stock cars lap
at around 130 miles an hour.
While Richard Petty’s driver, Bobby
Hamilton, was scoring his second
Winston Cup victory in a Pontiac
Grand Prix, Jeff Gordon’s Chevrolet
Monte Carlo was finishing fourth, two
positions ahead of Mark Martin’s Ford
Thunderbird. Gordon leads Martin by
125 points in the Winston Cup chase.
Dale Jarrett’s Ford Thunderbird is in
third, 145 points behind Gordon.
Gordon, who turned 26 in August,
nel, said of Vardell. “Sometimes you’re
in the wrong place at the wrong time.
He had a period when he had a lot of
injuries. It’s hard to play when the
parts aren’t all working.”
Injuries held back Vardell when the
Lions opened training camp, so they
didn’t know what they had for a while.
But Ross likes what he has seen of
Vardell and backup Cory Schlesinger.
“He’s an adequate runner, a very
good receiver and he’s becoming a
very good blocker,” Ross said of
Vardell. “There used to be a big differ
ence between him and Schlesinger as
a blocker, but when he’s done with his
work at practice, Vardell will go over
and hit the blocking sled by himself.
At the same time, Cory is getting
somebody to throw him the ball so he
can work on his receiving.
“Each guy is working to improve the
phase of the game they’re weakest in.
It’s developing into a good position.
They’re two pretty good players.”
Vardell never envisioned getting
satisfaction from being a blocker, but
need only finish 13th or better today
and in the season finale at Atlanta
Motor Speedway to grab the second
Winston Cup of his career. The NAPA
500 is scheduled Nov. 16 in Atlanta.
Outlaws’ last stand
The Pennzoil World of Outlaws
winged sprint cars run their last races
of the season this week during the Las
Vegas Shootout on the half-mile clay
oval at Las Vegas Motor Speedway 11
miles due north of the Strip (8 p.m.
Friday, TNN).
Always-working Sammy Swindell
leads the points standings driving the
Gambler house car. Steve Kinser, 14-
time circuit champion, trails Swindell.
Ex-champ Dave Blaney, teaming
with savvy crew chief Ken Woodruff,
is also in the battle.
All-stars race
The eight best Top Fuel qualifiers
this season in NHRA Winston Drag
Racing meet in the Budweiser Classic
that was before his blocks sprang
Barry Sanders for long runs, an 82-
yarder for a score against Tampa Bay
and a 37-yarder against the New York
Giants the following week. He also
made a crucial third-down catch
against the Giants that set up a game-
tying, fourth-quarter touchdown.
“He gives us a lot of different
options,” Lions quarterback Scott
Mitchell said of Vardell. “He takes
pressure off Barry and he gives us
another option for our passing game.”
“It’s very satisfying for me,” Vardell
said of his blocking. “It used to be how
many yards I’d gain or passes I’d
catch, but now when I know Barry got
yards after I threw a good block, I get
the same kind of satisfaction I’d get if
I was doing something for someone
else. It’s almost like a selfless thing.”
It’s the type of feeling Vardell would
n’t mind experiencing a while longer -
with the Lions.
“It’d be nice if I could stay here,”
Vardell said. “I’m as happy here as I’ve
ever been playing football.”
during the Winston Finals at Pomona
(Calif.) Raceway,. 35 miles east of Los
Angeles (7 p.m. Saturday, TNN).
At stake: $100,000.
Running for the big Budweiser
bucks are: Five-time Top Fuel champi
on Joe Amato; Gary Scelzi, driving
for the 'Johnson family; Joe Gibbs
Racing’s Cory McClenathan; cur
rent Top Fuel title holder Kenny
Bernstein; two-time Top Fuel cham
pion Scott Kalitta of Chelsea; sec
ond-generation racer Mike Dunn,
driving for Darrell Gwynn; another
second-generation racer, Bob Van-
dergriff Jr.; and Don “The Snake”
Prudhomme’s driver, Larry Dixon,
a second-generation Top Fuel racer.
Kalitta is temporarily quitting rac
ing to devote his attention to his
Willow Run-based airline, Trans
Continental Airlines, and to his fami
ly. But Scott and father Connie are
expected to continue to campaign with
a Top Fuel dragster in 1998, with a
driver to be announced.
couch potato time
SUNDAY
1 p.m. NFL, Washington at Chicago, Channel
2.
1 p.m. NFL, New England at Minnesota,
Channel 4.
1 p.m. CFL, Playoffs: British Columbia at
Montreal, Channel 9.
2 p.m. Golf, PGA Tour Championship, final
round, Channel 7.
2 p.m. Auto racing, NASCAR Dura Lube 500,
TNN.
3 p.m. Tennis, ATP Paris Open, final round,
ESPN.
3 p.m. NHL, Anaheim at Detroit, Fox Sports
Detroit.
4 p.m. NFL, Dallas at San Francisco, Channel
2.
4 p.m. CFL, Playoffs: Saskatchewan at
Calgary, Channel 9.
6 p.m. NBA, Detroit at New York, Channel 50.
7 p.m. ABL, New England at Philadelphia,
Fox Sports Detroit.
8 p.m. NFL, Detroit at Green Bay, Channel 7.
MONDAY
9 p.m. NFL, Pittsburgh at Kansas City,
Channel 7.
TUESDAY
7:30 p.m. NBA, Detroit at Atlanta, Fox Sports
Detroit.
8 p.m. NBA, Houston at Seattle, TNT
9 p.m. Boxing, Tim Witherspoon vs. Levi
Billups, heavyweights, 10 rounds, USA.
WEDNESDAY
7:30 p.m. NHL, Detroit at Carolina, Channel
50.
7:30 p.m. NBA, Indiana at Detroit, Fox Sports
Detroit.
7:30 p.m. Bowling, PBA Ebonite Challenge,
final round, ESPN.
8 p.m. NBA, Orlando at Chicago, TBS.
THURSDAY
1 p.m. Golf, Sarazen World Open, first round,
Fox Sports Detroit.
2 p.m. Golf, Senior Tour Championship, first
round, ESPN.
4 p.m. Golf, PGA Kapalua International, first
round, ESPN.
7:30 p.m. IHL, Cincinnati at Detroit, Fox
Sports Detroit.
8 p.m. College football, Arkansas at
Mississippi, ESPN.
FRIDAY
1 p.m. Golf, Sarazen World Open, second
round, Fox Sports Detroit.
3 p.m. Golf, Senior Tour Championship, sec
ond round, ESPN.
7:30 p.m. NHL, Pittsburgh at Detroit, Fox
Sports Detroit.
7:30 p.m. Golf, PGA Kapalua International,
second round, ESPN.
8 p.m. NBA, Orlando at Detroit, Channel 50.
9 p.m. Boxing, Michael Grant vs. Jorge Luis
Gonzalez, heavyweights, 10 rounds, ESPN.
10:30 p.m. NBA, New York at Los Angeles
Lakers, TNT.
SATURDAY
Noon College football, Northwestern at
Illinois, Channel 7.
Noon College football, Temple at Navy, Fox
Sports Detroit.
12:30 p.m. College football, Michigan State at
Purdue, ESPN.
12:30 p.m. College football, Iowa at Wisconsin,
ESPN2.
1:30 p.m. Horse racing, Breeders’ Cup,
Channel 4, 9.
3 p.m. College football, East Carolina at
Houston, Fox Sports Detroit.
3:30 p.m. College football, Michigan at Penn
State, Channel 7.
3:30 p.m. College football, Louisiana State at
Alabama, Channel 62.
3:30 p.m. Golf, Senior Tour Championship,
third round, ESPN.
5:30 p.m. Golf, PGA Kapalua International,
third round, ESPN.
6 p.m. College football, Miami at Virginia
Tech, ESPN2.
7 p.m. College football, Texas Tech at Texas,
Fox Sports Detroit.
7:30 p.m. NHL, Phoenix at Toronto, Channel
9. , .
7:30 p.m. College football, Florida State at
North Carolina, ESPN.
9 p.m. College football, San Jose State at San
Diego State, ESPN2.
10:30 p.m. NHL, Anaheim at Vancouver,
Channel 9.
closes in on Winston Cup points title
Page 35 - [see page image]
NOVEMBER 2, 1997
THE DETROIT SUNDAY JOURNAL
PAGE 35
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tape stripe, pass, side airbag, lux. grp., CFC-free A/C, spd.
control/tilt, tachometer, anti-theft, remote entry, pwr. win
dow/lock grp., pwr. mirrors, 2.3L EFI 1-4 eng., 5-spd. man.
O/D trans., 3.73 ratio reg rr. axle, 4220 GVWR, super eng.
cooling, heavy duty cooling,/battery, cloth 60/40 split bench
seat. Stk. #79151.
2.9% APR FINANCING AVAIL
$195
Per Month 24 Mo. Lease
SAVE $5230
98 ZX2 COUPE
2.0L DOHC 16 V Zetec eng., auto trans., PEP 327A,
A/C, remote entry driver’s door, rr. defrost,
P185/65R14 BSW tires, floor mats, dual pwr. mirrors,
AM/FM stereo cass., solar tinted glass, 2nd genera
tion airbags, full console w/cass. storage, rr seat heat
duct, 60/40 split folding rr. seat, driver’s seat memory
recline. Destination included. Stk. #8150. Attn: ‘96/’97
College Grad.
$215
** 24 Mo.
Per Month Lease
97 EXPLORER
4.0 SOHC eng., auto O/D trans., PEP 946A, Eddie
BauerTrim, lux. grp., elec. grp., hi-series floor console,
4.10LS axle/trailer tow, moonroof, trailer towing pkg.,
running boards, electromatic mirror, pwr.
windows/locks, driver & pass. pwr. bucket leather
seats, rear defrost, rear wiper/washer, dual airbags,
Stk. #76254. Attn: ’96/'97 College Grad.
$1150
SAVE $6905
FACTORY REBATE
98 CONTOUR LX4-DR SEDAN
VARSITY FORD WILL NOW “A” PLAN CONTOURS
Auto O/D trans., P185/70R14 BSW tires, front/rr. carpeted
floor mats, rr. window defr., floor mounted console with
cupholders, rr. pass, compartment heat duct, AM/FM
stereo, tilt steering column, A/C, cloth bucket seats, remote
decklid release, pwr. rack & pinion steering, tinted glass,
front driver and pass, airbag, Stk. #82066. Attn: ‘96/'97
College Grads.
$259
** 24 Mo.
Per Month Lease
**24 month lease, 12,000
miles per year, 15® per mile
penalty. A refundable securi
ty deposit of 1 mo. payment
rounded upward to the near
est $25 increment plus 1st
payment, license and title are
due at delivery.
•plus tax, title, license, and
destination. Rebate comput
ed in price.
3480 JACKSON
AT WAGNER,
ANN ARBOR, Ml
1-94 EXIT #172, TURN LEFT
996-2300
ANN ARBOR
‘97 F-SERIES MODEL CLOSEOUT
0/ ~ 0R ~ UPT0
2.91 *10511
w AVAILABLE FACTORY
10
APR
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
REBATES
F-150’S • F-250’8 • F*350’S • REG. CAB • SUPERCAB • STAKES
DUMPS • SNOW PLOW EQUIPPED • 6-CYL. • 8-CYL. • DIESELS
97 EXPLORER SPORT
4.0 SOHC eng., auto O/D trans., Sport Trim, luxury group,
electronics group, luggage rack, front O/H console, hi-
series floor console, fog lamps, P235 OWL all-terrain tires,
step bar, full face chrome wheels, 3.73 axle, prem. sport
pkg., CD/cassette, cloth buckets, antilock brakes
dual airbags, power windows/locks, speed
control, tilt wheel, rear defrost, rear wiper/
washer, pwr. driver seat/mirrors, floor mats.
Stk. #81543. Attn: ‘96/’97 College Grad.
3.9% APR FINANCING AVAILABLE
C90C** PER 24 MONTH
vOAU MONTH LEASE;
$20,690
2.9" +$ 750
■ IV FINANCING I W W
AVAILABLE FACTORY REBATES
ON ALL ‘97 EXPLORERS
97 E150 STARCRAFT^Ml
LUXURY CONVERSION^ 1
4.6L EFI V8 eng., elec. auto O/D trans., pref. equip, pkg., 743A, RE
converter trim, ilium, visor mirrors, AM/FM stereo w/cass./clock, pass,
airbag, 4 wheel anti-lock brake system, 3.55 ratio reg. axle, RV plus
group, bright cast alum, wheels, power mirrors, aux. heater A/C pkg.,
w/rear control, remote keyless entry/panic alarm, pwr.
windows/locks/speed control/tilt wheel, sheer shades for vista bay
window and cargo door, matching power tri-fold add-a-back sofa, 6-
way power driver seat, quick release mid seats w/swivel & slide, rear
air/heat vented thru rear overhead, DLX headphone system, ilium.
valances, motor cover drink tray, TV/VCR
cab., sofa table & cupholders, 1-r
phantom blend paint, high gloss
walnut leather surface seating,
ambiance light group, rear radio.
97 RANGER PICKU
2.3L EFI 4-cyl. eng., 5-spd. man. O/D trans., XLT trim,
floor consolette, pwr. steering, XLT grp., P255 steel
OWL all season tires, cast alum deep dish wheels,
sliding rr. window, XLT tape stnpe, tinted glass, front
driver airbag, 4220 GVWR, 3.73 ratio, cloth seat, 3
yr./30,000 mile warranty. Stk. #75750
$8790
$1990
FACTORY REBATE
98 WINDSTAR WAGON
Pref. equip, pkg. 470B, tinted windows, CFC-free A/C, pwr. conv. grp.,
pwr. windows/locks, p205/70R15 BSW tires, 3.0L eng., 4-spd. auto
O/D trans., spd. control, tilt, rr. window defrost, AM/FM stereo
cass., deluxe wheel covers, solar tinted glass, 4 wheel anti-
lock brake system, second row & third row cloth seat with
forward folding seat back & quick release for removal, front
driver & pass, airbags, cloth seats. Attn: ‘96/'97 College
Grad. Stk. #81850.
$17,990
$319**24 MONTH LEASE
97 F150 4x4 XLT SUPERCAB
4.6L EFI V8 eng., 4-spd auto trans., PEP 507A, XLT series,
spd. control, tilt, A/C, AM^FM stereo/cass. pwr. aero mirrors,
P255/70R16 OWL all-terrain tires, 3.55 limited slip axle. 4x4
elec. shift, sliding rr. window, trailer towing pkg., cast alum,
wheels, 6-way pwr. driver's seat, remote keyless entry/anti-
theft, pwr. windows/locks, 40/60 split bench seat, tinted glass.
Stk. #77739. Attn: ‘96T97 College Grad.
$21,990
$1000= TiS-
97 EXPLORER XLT 4x4 4-DR
Pref. equip, pkg., XLT trim, radio elec. prem. w/cass., luggage rack, lux. grp., elec. grp.,
overhead console, hi-series floor console, fog lamps, 4.0L EFI V6 eng., auto O/D trans.,
3.73 LS axle/trailer tow, trailer towing pkg., pwr. windows/door
locks, spd. control/tilt wheel, 6-way pwr. driver seat, rr. heat/air
controls, rr. int. wipers, rr. elec. defroster, 4wheel anti-lock ,
brakes, spd. sensitive dual inter, wipers, elec. compass,
outside temp. Attn: ‘96/’97 College Grad. Stk. #77441
97 F150 XLT PICKUP
Pref. equip, pkg. 507A, cruise, tilt, A/C, AM/FM
stereo/cass./clock, cast alum, wheels, pwr. aero mirrors, 4.2L
EFI V6 eng., 5-spd. man O/D trans., P235/70R16 OWL all
season tires, 3.08 ratio regular axle, sliding rr. window,
pwr. windows/locks, dual airbags, 40/60 split bench
seat, destination included. 3 yr./36,000 mile warranty.
Attn: 96/’97 College Grad. Stk. #77651
$14,390
$1000
SAVE $5200
FACTORY REBATE
VARSITY^
97F3504-DR CREW CAB 7-0-7 CONVERSION
“POWER STROKE TURBO DIESEL”
Elec. 4-spd. auto trans., pref. equip, pkg. 671 A, XLT
trim, cruise, tilt, A/C, AM/FM stereo, int. light grp ,
chrome appearance pkg., pwr. windows/locks, 4.10
ratio reg. axle, camper pkg., dual rr. wheels, 10,000 lb.
GVWR, front license bracket, eng block heater, spare
tire & wheel, RV exterior trim pkg., 40/20/40 leather
seats, walnut hi-gloss dash, door trim, lighted overhead
console, lighted grab handles, painted bed rails,
smoked bug shield, tailgate protector, tail light lens
cover, alum, bud mags, ground effects, full fade paint,
pwr. slide rr. window, 10" drop bumper. Stk. #76669
$35,990
FULL
TANK OF GAS WITH
EVERY PURCHASE
ICHIGAN’S “A” PLAN
HEADQUARTERS
SALES OPEN MON. & THURS. 9-9
TUES., WED., FRI. 9-6; SAT 9-5
SERVICE NOW OPEN
6 AM - 7 PM MON. thru FRI.
Ejj^^^DEUlL
-800-875-FOR
a
Page 36 - [see page image]
Joe
Adams
Journal photo by REBECC^Sj^K
PAGE 32: With ¥arde!i f fullback no longer a trotible spot for LIors, says Joe Adams.
PAGE 34: It isn't a statement: Wings are Just playing well, says Paul Harris*
PAGE 36
NOVEMBER 2, 1997
Wolverines’ ‘D’ is Grade-A
Lynn
Henning
All of a sudden,
the scent of Roses
in air for
otes, thoughts, items:
■ Michigan’s football
team enlightens the con
fused.
Those who thought Michigan State
might actually topple Michigan in
this year’s tussle at East Lansing
can’t imagine who might be included
there) were guilty of three serious
miscalculations.
1. Thinking that U-M’s talent along
the line of scrimmage would essen
tially be neutralized by Michigan
State’s strength there.
2. Believing that Michigan’s offense
was not as strong overall as MSU’s
while the Spartans were not that far
beneath U-M defensively.
3. Concluding that there was more
balance between the two teams than
actually exists.
On the latter point, some of us
should have known better. That’s all
because U-M’s defense had shown
itself in previous weeks to be from
another realm compared with the
best 1990s-style college defenses.
The difference primarily is U-M’s
secondary. No group of defensive
backs in memory closes on a receiver
or on a pass as quickly as the Char
les Woodsons and Tommy Hendrick
ses who roam back there. No bunch
supports as well on the run and
remains as fleet on pass coverage.
Therein is the difference between
this team and the kind of shut-’em-
out defenses in which Bo Schembech-
ler’s squads specialized during the
mid-’70s. The ’97 secondary is filled
with speed and assault artists - no
fewer than seven DBs who are essen
tially interchangeable.
See HENNING, Page 33
This was one of the few times MSU managed to get its hands on U-M cornerback Charles Woodson during the Wolverines’ 23-7 victory.
U-M’s Wo
won’t win
but he s
ond on the school’s career list, behind
only Tom Curtis with 25. He has only
touched the ball six times on offense
this season, but U-M hasn’t needed
him on offense while winning their
first seven games. He’s better off
leading a defense that might be the
best Ann Arbor has seen since the
mid-1970s.
“I’ve watched the kid for three
years and I don’t think I’ve ever seen
a more valuable player than Char
les,” said U-M coach Lloyd Carr. “He’s
an individual who can affect the out
come of a game from the cornerback
position and that’s difficult to do.”
Woodson’s interception, in which he
See ADAMS, Page 33
E AST LANSING - Once you
saw the play there was no
way you could forget it.
Even after repeated view
ings - national and local sportscasts
gave people plenty of chances to see
it - you couldn’t get tired of seeing
the fabulous leaping interception
Charles Woodson made in No. 4
Michigan’s 23-7 victory at Michigan
State on Oct. 25.
It’s doubtful Woodson, a 6-foot-1,
198-pound junior from Fremont,
Ohio, can win the Heisman Trophy,
even if he is the best college football
player in the country. But if the
Wolverines keep winning, he might
settle for being the best player on the
nation’s best team.
“Heisman. I don’t know about that,”
Woodson said. “I’m just a pretty
decent player.”
Woodson’s a pretty decent player
like the Rolling Stones are a pretty
decent band. Going into Saturday’s
game against Minnesota, Woodson
led the Wolverines with five intercep
tions and his 15 career picks are sec-