Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Star Tribune from Minneapolis, Minnesota • Page 33

Publication:
Star Tribunei
Location:
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Issue Date:
Page:
33
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

li The weather Entertainment Arts Readings for Friday, March 9, 1979 Saturday Mar. 10, 1979 .110 VNIT Thursday, Marc i. tllf JS UI 5 'I consump tion, ih. dolly llgurt reflects iho dwm by which average lemoertiores ml below is, me eolni el which erlitlrial Keeling it generally considered Cumulative Inures reoorl heeling unilt tine July I Duly nealing units. 4J Same dale lail year.

44 Normal lor this dale. 41 Seiui lolal, 6122. Sea-ton loiel on tame dele last year, 20S5. Normal tea ton lolal lor ihlt dalt. 042; MINNIAPOU AOINOti (V.il.rdty) Mg.

mMllryaltem 4tpercenl Precipitation: 24 hours ending 1 Pm 0 inches Toltl Jen to dalt 3 17 inches ieeertall! 24 hours ending torn ID inrhet Tuiel this month Inches Seoson loiol tS 1 inches (Tetlayltufl rites I3t Mil il pm Mean phase Quarter 'tt 0 sets 4 SS a COMPARATIVE TIMPtRATURCI 124-hour Do-nod ending al I High 10 14 I Low 17 It pm) veer ago high t. Kin All-Unit high for IA 1A IOJI AK.Iuim Inu. I. New Ch. 1 1 news is at best ordinary lyiaim IV.

'Vi iTiBil.ll 1 146 By Neal Cendler Staff Writer jCommentary 8 9 10 11 Noon 17 am. 1 2 3 4 56 7 temp. 28 28 30 28 28 25 20 pm 12 3 4 5 6 7 temp. 18 17 16 15 14 12 10 WTCN, Its ads say, Is betting a million dollars we'll like NewsCenter 11. The first few shows should have brought some takers.

8 8 9 10 11 7 5 4 Forecasts: Early efforts by WTCN's million-dollar news team were at best ordinary and at worst riddled with production in tht teenv High, on Sunday In tht 30i lo tht KK North Dakota: Clear to partly cloudy today through fluffs. Technical boo-boos were the obvious luaay in ittni io iht 30s LOW itro to 20 Highi on Sunday in tht 20t to Iht Sooth Oatttia: Cltar to partly cloudv with chanct TwInCltltii Clear to partly cloudy etd colder today mrouyh Sunday Wind trom It rwrinwe.t it 10 to mi, ptr hour lodav H-gh today li to 20 Low lo-myht 10 lo IS High on Sunday In ma upoer 7Q MlfiMMta; Claar to oar tly cloudy and colder today through Sunday Might today In tht teen, lo tha lower 70s Low tonight btlow lo 10 aoovt. H-ghi on Sunday in Iht 70 to ntar JO. Wlicontln: Cloudy with a rhanca of snow Hume, todav through Sunday High today In tht Lowi tonight 5 to IS High, on Sunday In tha towtr to mid-die 30i lava: Clear lo partly cloudy lodav through Sunday Hght lodav tha 20ft lo the towr 30ft Lowt tonight Ti a 'ouny mrougn sunaay Hign, today problems to most people, but they began to disappear after Tuesday and can be shrugged off. Every station has nights of bad microphones, and wrong slides.

-v u.w) loniini in mi iteni to int upptr 20t High, on Sunday In Iht upper 20s to ntar SO but his pirouettes, arm-waving and flawless mlle-a-mlnute speech float him like Peter Pan strafing town with a word gun. He knows what he's talking about so rapidly, but snazzed up like the Duke of Windsor complete with carnation he comes off as slick: Prof. Harold Hill come to sell us the weather. Sportscaster Bob Kurtz, on the other-hand, hardly can make It through a short sentence. His off-the-cuff style, is wide of the mark; people know', this stuff is written and he might as well just read it.

Someone also ought to let him In on a fact of Minnesota life: Sexism is out of style. Men still might buy Playboy and snicker about women's chests, but they don't do It In public, if they're In a popularity contest. The sort of ad libs Kurtz and Dyer made about Jimmy Connors' Playmate wife and a bikini ski event slithered from public life last decade. Everyone at Ch. 11 ought to calm' down.

It's not that Ch. new folks aren't competent to give us the most cf the straight news reporting was all right, and Dyer was exemplary, if a bit hard, but these people have been selected and pumped up to be terrific when they ought to be left alone so their merit and John- bunch who'll eventually become familiar to us as they produce first-rate enterprise. But they shouldn't expect miracles they're still strangers with boomy voices, delivering stories that lack what someone has called the tiny, authenticating details that subliminally make things believable. The boorniness is its own bane. Anchorman Jim Dyer and weatherman Glenn Burns pound at us rapidly in basso profundo.

This Is especially obvious with a flip of the dial to the comfortably calmer Moores on 4 or Magers on 5. But a consultant wouldn't know that Minnesotans tend toward understatement. The new guys are trying too hard, and too much is overdone. An opening consumer series, fur too much about far too little, was a caricature of an expose big-eyed, dramatic-voiced Jane Mitchell recounting breathlessly how some home buyers couldn't get -a builder to finish up details. The opening showed a doorknob falling off, but the story was delivered like revelations of human body parts in cans of chile.

It could be nominated for "Saturday Night Live." The weather also is just too much. ivTTTftf uivim; to partly cloudv aw ntomy mrougn sunaay. Hign, today and Sunday in tht 20t to ntar 40. Lowt tonight in It. TOk in tn and brisk show crammed with features.

Twin Cities ratings, however, have been made In the face of formula by a raspy actor turned anchor, a bald sidekick who loves art and shares despair at blizzards and a bushy-haired college professor short on show-biz graces but long on weather knowledge. Behind them were long-term, big-ticket commitments to competence for its own sake. The name "NewsCenter 11" seems an attempt to Implant the notion that Ch. 11 overnight has become the center for Twin Cities news. Fat chance; It took years for WCCO to topple KSTP's ratings and years for KSTP to retake them.

Equally absurd is any idea that TV reporters are Interchangeable parts, batches of which can be stamped out of a hairdresser's cookie cutter, plugged wholesale into a city to win viewers. The ranking TV reporters like Skip Loescher and Marcla Fluer won the public's respect with years of toll. The new folks at 11 aren't to blame The larger question Is why News-Center 11 didn't appear to be any thing special. Maybe it shouldn't; specialties takes time, and perhaps Today's regional weather forecasts e4uedevMTyonOTnofiftvlheNtfky ttvnh I Upper Midwest it's sufficient that WTCN be In the VViivttpngp same league as KSTP and WCC0. It's High tamotralurt rtadmg in tht 13 -hour pt-riod ending at 4 pm Fri another world from what preceded It on 11, and WTCN's commitment and Devti -A Intwrvittonal Fwis day Low itmptraturt rtad- resources should enable it to spend its way into the big time.

But there ing in the II -hour period ending at a Friday are some problems. Oaf Ctoocry 3 Partly cloudy Numbart indkeat rngaocrTl rnpraturM viRaei Snow fo, SsroMrt SDrilM rlFraazmg dnuta 3 Thjydarohowaf a Prtctpiiattoti in the 24- hour period ending at 4 The basic one is tone. The name "NewsCenter 11" Is an abuse of English that smells of consultants determined to dazzle us rubes with the Kndav T-Tract MINNESOTA Grand "Vs. (3 otkj fj "0 3510 515 I Ouluth (J I Brainafd P- 1015 () 1 (i "I 3 15-20 15'JO vi Wbrmrv RoUllllrYl- Cs J0.2S'J 1 2055 Mntori nv Carson at 10:30 can make their m-iuii iu.ju v.an i Burns isn't the first in town to super Burns isn i ine nrsi in town io for looking nice, and their first ef ior looking nice, ana meir ursi 04 "winning newscast" formula: catchy title; deep-voiced, handsome people, winning newscast lormuid: taicny title; deep-voiced, handsome people, TwmCitiet 30 Aieiandria Bemidii I Oututh 24 inlet-nit Falls I Redwood FaUt 17 TCiMt Roc heftier ei- super- forts indicate they're a capable impose himself on full-screen slides, case for them. Too much gilding hurts program about Lillie The Lillie Langtry TV -tease has been ff wmmmmmmmmmmmammmmmm going on for a long time, and it t-jc I Blftf "II The Lillie Langtry TV -tease has been going on for a long time, and it Si Cloud WISCONSIN Eau Claire La Croue Medi4on Wautau i NORTH DAKOTA Will continues.

Weather in other major U.S. cities First we got the word that actress B'Wiarc 7 Dickinvon 11 Fergo 7 OrendFoikt JenwMlown 7 Mnot 5 WiHillon I Francesca Annis would be seen in Jones after last night tt a fVi4 1 the "Edward the King" series as Lil SOUTH DAKOTA lie at the time she was mistress to King Edward VII. Aberdeen Huron Lfnynon AAobridge Pierre Reoid City SiOua Falls Walorlown A couple of weeks ago she made her first appearance in that Mobil Showcase series on Ch. 9, but not in the drama itself. A flash of Annis as Langtry was shown In a set of brief clips shown as preview to the follow Canada ing week episode.

And what did we see of the scandalous Lillie the following week? Well, I 45 19 19 37 25 J9 23 0 9 43 2S SO 32 0 CoKv Edmonton rVtocitreai 04'aws Regma Toronto Vancouver Winnipeg World it turned out that there wa a brief, teasing introduction of Lillie built right Into the structure of that epi Today' Tomorrow'! Yelterdey Ferecelt Fereceit Le HI Pcpn tty Le HI Sty Le HI AiOwtueroue ii ti t-er X) i 61 Aniento 34 41 Plfidy 2i P'C'dv 30 tj Anchorege It 31 Cttudy 1 3t Cloudv 24 AiV.Kt 1 t4 Rem J4 Picldy 2' 45 Atiemt 31 tt Hun 3t SI Cloudy IS 44 Anemic Cl'y 34 4 STiw-l 37 PlclOv It 47 Beinmore 33 14 Cioud. ii ficklv 32 4S H.i'ingi 21 It I'm, li a rVmdv 30 60 Birm.ngrwm J3 Ka.n 4S St Su 24 52 Bollon 40 49 C.Oudv 3 4t Ptcldv 40 41 BuHtlO 21 42 Shwri 35 41 Snoo 12 30 Ceioer 13 33 Ot 17 42 S.jnny 2S SS Cherieiion.SC 43 SS Ron 11 21 Ptddy 43 Cheyenne IS 37 02 Sunny 19 44 Sunny 21 tl Chicego 32 3S 12 Ooudy 21 27 Ptcldv Cint.nnell .13 47 Snow 34 35 Plody II 32 Cwvetend 29 44 Ot 3 Cloudy II 30 reuat fl Worm 52 tS Far IS SS 32 to Drnyer 2t 3S It P'ckSv IS SO Sunny 24 S9 DuAAoinet 27 31 Kkldy 17 27 PMOy II 39 li.lro.1 2 17 Windy 2t 3 Picldy 15 27 fc.Pew SS 71 Cioudy 44 Cloudy 31 72 Farrtientt I 21 Cloudv i 25 Picldy 3 23 G'tllFett 2' 41 Sunny 21 Windy 32 60 Honolulu tl IC Sunny tt 10 Sunny 10 Houtlon SI 74 Cloudv 52 tS Plcidv 40 65 ind.anapoiit 12 41 OS Cloudy 21 33 Plcidv II 34 jectjwyllle 31 6 Pl.idv 45 71 Shn 45 62 nenvttClly 33 4 1 3J P'cldy 20 J4 Phridv 2S 44 At veget 49 75 Sunny 47 10 Sonny 41 lolAngetet S3 67 Plcidv SS 70 Plcidv S3 72 Louitvue 37 St Picldv 37 31 Feir 23 40 Wemohu 3' 71 Plcidv 42 52 Fair 30 SO warn. Beech 63 77 fair 62 71 Plcidv 61 10 33 35 Plcidv 21 76 Sunnv IS 33 MfwOwent 45 71 Cloudy S2 Fair 42 2 Nrw Vori 37 52 Rem 39 42 Ram 36 4 5 Oienome CiW 40 52 Picldv 21 53 eir 21 62 Ome'ie 75 42 02 Picioy 10 24 Sunny IS 43 Oriendo 43 74 Fair 52 10 Shwri St 72 14 57 Snw SO Picldv IS 45 Phoenil S5 76 Pkidv 44 79 Sunnv 43 II P'Kourgh 29 44 Rem 39 40 ptridv II 30 Portland Me 3S 4t Cloudv 27 43 Rnm J4 40 Portland Ore 44 Su4nv 47 77 Sunny 43 St Rale.gn 34 64 Cloudv 31 63 PMdv JS 51 S- louil 35 II II Plcwly 20 3 5 PtcMy 23 40 San Le C'tv 24 47 SS Feir 30 60 San Anions 44 12 OOuOV 40 63 P'cldv 40 65 Sen Doo 57 64 Plcidv 57 no P'cidv 4 si SanFrencnco 52 44 Foguy 52 SI Foggy 40 tj Sjn Juen PR 71 14 Sunny 71 15 Sunny 71 15 S' SH AAerie 29 33 04 Windv 20 2t PtckJv 4 14 See'he 31 64 Sunnv 31 rrf Sunnv 40 63 lemoe SI Prog 47 70 Fa.r 52 71 Snw't 56 72 40 62 Ciovo. 44 40 Piclv 34 42 sode. So what we had seen of Lillie Opvervationt made Friday, Varch In the preview teaser the week be fore was exactly what we saw of her in the script writer's built-in teaser the later week no more, no less.

By the time we got to the third week of Lillie she was on the screen for perhaps three minutes, mostly In party scenes in which she curtsied to conversational spark or charm or wit, or even of saltiness of tongue as there was quite early In "The Duchess of Duke Street," another series about one of Edward's paramours. A prospectus indicates that Lillie will be seen in a number of future episodes wearing the same simple, black, unadorned dress, one that became her trademark. The story is that she told people she was in mourning for a brother, but it was really the only dress she could afford at the time; she further liked the way the stark simplicity of the dress accented her beauty among the more glittery Victorian society women. So maybe the whole point of the story will be the way in which, for a woman of great beauty, a kind of bland opportunism could serve as well as wit, and maybe better. Grunt, grapple, groan Channel 9 may have picked up the old TV-wrestling franchise abandoned somewhere along the line by Channel 11, but don't rule out Channel 2 in that department.

If Arthur Naftalin has selected abortion as the topic for his "Minnesota Issues" program Monday night (7 30 p.m., Ch. 2), with Bernie Casserly of the Catholic Bulletin and Robert McCoy of the Abortion Rights Council as combatants, can wrestling on public TV be far behind1 head-turning future in the society of the faster-trotting Victorian men, if only she can find her way among those men. Lillie's one flirtation with a lad her own age runs her smack into a family scandal not of her own making. Eventually she contrives to marry a stuffy yachtsman, Edward Langtry', who is a family friend. Her favorite brother demands to know why she's doing such a thing.

"I'm marrying the man I answers Lillie piously. "Love!" scoffs the brother. "There must be more honorable ways to get off the island. There are women who sell themselves. Do you know what they're called?" Lillie slaps the lad by way of answer, and it's about time.

That slap, and a mild incident in which Lillie and brothers dress up like ghosts to scare some of their father's parishioners in the church graveyard, are the first signs of any spark or wit I've encountered in four weeks of Lillie-watch-ing. You can tell I'm still sore about that double-tease drill, right? But until proved otherwise. "Lillie" looks like a series about a woman v. ho, although perhaps a bit unconventional in her conduct from a Victorian point of view, deports herself as a highly prized object of beauty. There's been no sign of particular the Edward VII character and made City Time Temp.

Aoerdeen lorn 4t Amslerdom I p.m. 4S Ankara 3 pm. 44 Antiflua lam. 1) Athem 2 pm 59 Aockjand Mdnf 44 Beirut 2pm S9 Berlin I 45 eirrrungharn 1pm 41 Bonn I m. 43 BrmMrtj 1pm.

4i Cairo 2pm Copenhagen Ipm 37 DuWtn 1pm 39 Ceneva 1pm 50 Hong Kong I p.m 73 London Ipm 50 Madrid Ipm. 41 Mttrwla I 17 Moscow 3pm 30 New Dethi Som i Nice Ipm 57 Oslo Ipm 36 Paift ipm 44 Peking lorn 39 Rorrt I in 57 discreet, guarded conversation with him. And then she was gone from the series. Francesca Annis as Lillie Langtry' daughter of a minister on the island of Jersey. She's the only girl in a family of six brothers.

When the archbishop of Canterbury's son falls In love with her and wants to marry her, he's so embarrassed by discovering that he's been fooling around with a 15-year-old child in the body of a that he disappears. Poor Charlie. What's an archbishop of Canterbury's son supposed to do when the actress playing the child in the body of a woman happens to be a full-grown, full-bodied woman from the start? Anyway. Annis doesn't have much trouble making little Lillie look like a remarkable child with a solid So far the most scandalous aspect of Lillie was the way we had been teased so much for so little. And that whole series of quickies merely served as a further tease for the series called "Lillie," which will run for the next 13 weeks The same actress plays Lillie, and the same oil com Temperatureft are owerniphi lowft a-M) davi.me igh ffeoj'ted eno-talion or hours endinii I'im veverclav nV.nnea&o'is Timet ndnra'e untwaiiabtt iror Nrjiioricit Weatht' Se'wte indcates tc ace Latin America City Time Tema.

pany pays for the program. Sundav nieht's oDenina episode (8 Today1 IsiatKX Weather Service forecast XX'il1 The Aamv heVK) Asuncion lam 73 Buenot Aim I 64 Lima 7 1 61 p.m., Ch. 2) begins the story with M.ghetl lemoertluret corded the 24-hour peri Limes tomboy cnncinooa as me od ending el noon Friday March 9. 1979 Temp. 14 Actors Theatre should have left 'USA' buried 63 12 7S By Mike Steele II City Acaouico Barbedot Bermuda Bogcia Culiacan Curacoo Freeoort Gttedaiaiera Guadeloupe Havana Kingston Aionlego Bay hAaiatlan AAer.de AAexxo Clly AAonlerrev Nassau San Juan.

R. Si Kilti Tegucigalpa Trinidad Vera Crul 14 73 14 14 79 13 22 75 0ccJud-d Stortionary as -cjunj thow rgr ttrntMrtfurv exported toebfy a 74 Staff Writer While many of us were stumbling through our high school years, trying to leap that synapse where the apathetic '50s zapped Into the idealistic "60s, John Dos Passos was a handy fellow to have around. He didn't really have much impact on my generation (and, I daresay, none on those following), but those big, crusty volumes of his were a good reminder that things in life are tion, little dramatic tension and lots of words. The Actors Theatre production also can't do much to improve it. To give It theatrical life, I suspect, you'd need large production values, booming music, a sense of pageant and scale.

This is a spare production, not at all helped by Rick Walsh's ugly, clumsy and tacklly built set, and though Michael Andrew Miner has directed It In straightforward fash-Ion, the whole thing isn't nearly big-spirited enough to overcome its deficits. The best of the six performers is David Kwiat, who does some cunning vocal shifts to create diversity in his characters. Jim Cada and Chris Forth are also very good, Barbara Granning and Steven Pringle are good enough and only the shrill, shaky and mannered performa'nee of Merle McDill is unacceptable. Under any circumstances, however, I'm afraid Dos Passos has very little to say to us today, and he's chosen the very worst medium In which to say It. Jeane Dixon your horoscope mutable, that the only constant In history Is change and that historical Saturday, change can be for good or bad and men can steer It In either direction.

March 10, 1979 Nowhere did this ring more true than In Dos Passos' voluminous trilogy of the '30s "USA," a prose-poem chronicling the first three decades of the 20th century. They were sprawl tty working in the face of creeping conformity, people like Isadora Duncan, Robert La Follette, Frank Lloyd Wright, Eugene Debs, the Wright Brothers. Emma Goldman. If we stop here It's not hard to see that we have virtually nothing. The events of those three decades were mightily important, but we know all about them.

Similarly, we know the biographies of these historical figures. Even lumped together we don't get much sense of flow, no perspective and, above all, an embarrassing Inability to deal with the scope of Dos Passos' huge themes. But he didn't stop there. Running throughout the play is a fictional narrative about one J. Ward Moore-house, a poor and dimly educated young man working his way to the top In the Land of Opportunity.

He is aided in his climb to the top by a marriage to Gertrude Staple, daughter of a Pittsburgh steel magnate. His rise in the firm parallels the nation's rise through the industrial revolution into an economic power and. with the coming of World War into an international power. What's gained In power, however, Is lost in individuality. Big Government, Big Business and Big Labor are at hand.

To make these gains, the country, like Moore-house, suffers losses that may be greater than what was won. Again, however, Dos Passos deals dimly with human motivations and ploddingly with his narrative. He also fails to come to grips with theatrical imperatives. His six performers speak in the third person (which sets the play apart from similarly constructed works like "Under Milk Wood," "Spoon River" or even the recent with little interac Passos, almost completely without imagination. Yet, like bitter pills, taken at the right time they had a soothing effect on young people who were beginning to feel the spinning of the earth.

Then in 1958 Dos Passos, along with Paul Shyre, distilled the trilogy into a Broadway play that opened in 1959 with such then unknown actors as William Windom, William Redfield and Sada Thompson featured. It did rather poorly, and since then, except for the occasional academic exhumation, it hasn't been done very much. But the Actors Theatre of St. Paul has now dug it up and put In on stage for a four-weekend run to be followed by a tour In April. What we have ts a true theatrical curiosity 20 years old based on a novel 40 years old thrown Into the wild realities of 1979.

I wish I could say all this literary archaeology was worth it. Unfortunately, "USA" turns out to be one of those stage adaptations that have picked up all the weaknesses of the original and left behind the strengths. Rather than an epic sense of historical momentum, we get headlines, newsreels at best, piddling summaries of earth-shaking events. Then there's that gnawing matter of Dos Passos' epic lack of Imagination. "USA" turns out to be impressionistic theater rather than expressionists, simple recitation of names and events creating a blurred and not terribly dynamic collage.

Occasionally the narrative extends these recitations Into small biographies, especially when Dos Passos wants to deal with those figures he admires, people of great individual- -x ing books, stiff, confusing to follow, mostly Ignorant of deep human feeling or motivation and, typical of Dos Virgo (Aug. 2 3-Sept. 22): Avoid amenght it possible Mat waling to discuss budget cuts This afternoon you can be happy because someone is near and can be heiptul in personal matter. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct.

22): Possible to mix business and ptsasur social situation. Welcome chance lo experience new friendship lifestyle tutored to whims ot mat. Romance blossoms! Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Learn from past to make important, far-reaching decision about your future.

Dress wet today, someone may surprise you with mart CouW be a very influential person. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Oac 21): Be tactful with farmly members Keep rjiscuaaions on friendly basis Money could be source of disagreement Do some real work and quit nurturing lazy hatyts Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Self -improvement protects can give you tte phys-icay.

mentally Restless spirits may make tfvang of scene itscessary. You may be worrying needlessly about your health. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Fb. 18): Person close lo you may ask pointed question Provide answer directly, honestly Confession can relieve home atmosphere.

Make attempt to spend more tme with children Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20): you must work, today can be profitably spent on mutual resources Dealings with eisuranoe. tax people helpful Have fun without being V(h Wrttvday today: Six to what you know and you'll show great progrs enAurmg security Health probterne ot other concern you more then any tutrnentt you rray develop HeeOiogarid study key to your arfvencemerrl Special care ts needed i area ot romance it single Happmesa marriage grows This win be busy but rewacAng year it you pay anention Arte (March 21-Aprll 19): Romance could take you in new directions this weekend. Member ot opposite sex has detmite dees about your future Physical trtness deserves your attention Taurus (April 20-May 20): Love and marriage on rocky court now. Better prospects se home improvement activities, mmgs you can do alone Avoid secret entanglements Gemrnl (May 21-June 20): Slamp, coin coSections couW prove more valuable than you Imagwed Other hobbies also could lead you new commercial ventures Mate payrtner in contrary mood Cancer (June) 2 VJuly 22): Talented per son may appeal to you Don't do too much to help this person, however Slay within your rights where you ve Be modersle in alnow.

Leo (July 2 3-Aug. 22): family members may not share Saturday plans Cornpro-mne diplomacy best option What you do today i friendship could have long range effect. 'Flatbush' to leave air after angering Brooklyn Associated Press New York, N.Y. "Flatbush," a situation comedy set on the streets of Brooklyn that drew the wrath of borough officials, leaves the air after March 12, CBS said Friday in announcing a series of schedule changes. CBS said the prime-time shakeup will Include the addition of a new situation comedy and two limited series, and will Involve schedule changes for four programs.

St. Mark's Cathedral 519 Oak Grove St. Sunday March 1 1, 7:30 P.M. J. S.

Bach MASS IN MINOR Complete performance with orchestra Information 870-7800 Joan Olson easts your horoscop every morning In Ih Tribune i.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Star Tribune
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Star Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
3,157,563
Years Available:
1867-2024