The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 274, Ed. 1 Friday, September 16, 1983 Page: 5 of 18
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THE BAYTOWN SUN
Friday, September 16, 1963
S-*
iu-ru.
WAIT HERE.
6A»V. I
I'LL &0-0-0-0-0
s-aer the or hem:
Another Girl
Named Turner
I THINK I CAN
*EF HIM.
SMSaHMHH
Astro-Graph
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tills
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■r
, ■
nature Benefit! will result
when your logic It put to the
Bernice Bede O&ol
ft
/
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jen. 19) *
You have a stabilizing Influence
upon others today When per- £
sons you're Involved with go oft
on tangents, you’ll be able to *
get them bach on course “
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. II)
Although you are not likely to
m the year ahead you could be be overly aggressive or pushy,
quite fortunate with any deal- you still won't permit others to
ings Involving large groups of delegate you to a subordinate
people. You'd possess a knack role today
lor sensing the pulse of the PISCES (Feb. 20-Mar oh 20)
crowd and giving them what You'll (unction more efficiently
they want. today If you make a conscious 0
VIROO (Aug. 2>-Sept. 22) This effort to maintain a staady ®
can be a very productive day pace. Don't rush things, even If >
provided you can do things at urged to do so.
your own pace, free from out-1 ARIES (March 21-April IS)
side direction. Be your own You are now In a very fortunate £
boss Virgo predictions for the cycle lor making friends and _
helpful contacts. It's to your jir
Romance, career, luck, earn- advantage to begin to mingle V
ings, travel and much more are with new groups
discussed Send $1 to Astro- TAURUS (April 20-May 20) >-
Graph. Box 489. Radio City Dedicate your efforts and ener- Ui
Station, N.Y. 10019 Be sure to gles to Important objectives
state your zodiac sign. Send an today. If you are truly persis-1 ^
additional $2 for the NEW tent, Lady Luck will intervene
Astro-Graph Matchmaker on your behalf,
wheel and booklet. Reveals GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Let as
romantic compatibilities foa'all your thoughts take precedence 0
over those of your associates
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Ocl. 23) today. Your imagination is llke-
Select the types of social acllv- |y to perceive concepts they
(ties today which are not too can't,
tightly structured. Your enjoy- CANCER (June 21-July 22) S
ment will be lessened If you feel
you're under obligations
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You're exceptionally skilled
today at managing your
involvements. You’ll permit
others ample latitude, but it will
be YOU who has the final say,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec
21) Utilize your mental abilities
today on projects of a practical
W,
New Dazzler
cfour
*
‘Birthday
5
naas*
Jy DICK KLEINER
1®A Correspondent
HQUYWOOD (NEA) - For
years, Lana Turner was the
queen )f sexy sizzle in movies.
Now * have another Turner,
Kathlejn (no relation). In "Body
Heat" and “The Man With Two
ain$" she has showed that she
Is qulf adept at the sexy sizzle,
too. I
It siems to be Hollywood’s Il-
lustration of the old saying that
one good Turner deserves
anotrfr.
Katileen Turner, as a result of
playijg the title body In "Body
Heatf and following that with
som^ great comedy moments in
“Thj Man With Two Brains,” is
onelof the hottest properties
aroiiid town these days.
Sip just finished her third
- "A Breed Apart,” with
Hauer and Powers Boothe
is currently off to Mexico
forher fourth, "Romancing the
Stcie,” with Michael Douglas.
Sie thinks she has gotten better
in jach film. Anyone who was aw-
edby her beauty In "Body Heat”
mght be surprised to learn she
iks she looked even more
utiful in “The Man With Two
Biins.”
‘It’s a combination of better
rrukeup and better lighting,” she
„ svs. “Plus I’m getting better as I
ge older.”
She is also getting braver. She
s^s she is now brave enough to
s,-y no to offers more often, and
V Mieves that saying no frequently
is a key to acting success. She
slid no a lot after “Body Heat”
zomed her to the top. Naturally,
alot of producers flocked around
Wth offers to play parts similar to
Nattie Walker and she didn’t
vbnt to do that.
f“I turned them all down," she
ays. “Instead, I went back to the
sage for a while.”
(She considers herself primarily
stage actress. That’s what she
arted out to be, and that’s what
te still wants to be.
She grew up here and there,
ler father was in the foreign sfer-
'ice and there were four Turner
ihildren. Two of them grew up
• fating that peripatetic life — liv-
ing In Venezuela, England,
panada and Cuba — and wanted
inly to settle down somewhere
forever. But Kathleen and her
younger brother thrived on the
moving around and all the n$w
experiences.
At 14, she decided she was going
to act. She says her mother insists
she always was an actress-
“Mother says I always per-
orated,” she says. “She says I
irst sang a solo when I was four,
|n a department store.”
M-S. Still Not
Free Of Disease
|
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HEY. THERE,
SOLDIER!
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&
THANKS, PAL, AND
PLEASANT DREAMS?
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year ahead are now ready
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THIS COSTUME MAKES
PEXFOZfiAlN6 PAINLESS
have sons
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Cl
mn
Donl be hesitant to be of ser-
vice today If oltlere' request
your assistance. Your good
deeda could result In future
rewards.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Put
yourself in the other person's
shoes today so that you can
understand his or her view-
point. This will eliminate poten-
tial misunderstandings.
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HAVE A FLAT T*RE,
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spades so that he could take
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a club finesse.
Back to dummy with a
second spade to lead another
dub. East produced the king
and South ducked. Now he
was sure of a total of three
clubs, three spades, one
heart and two diamonds.
West’s last hearts had been
quietly put to sleep.
“Very well played,” said
West. “You haa guarded
against my getting the lead
in clubs, yet East really
should have beaten you."
“How?” asked South.
“Easy,” said West. “On
the third heart East had a
chance to discard and should
have chucked his king of
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HOW OXACMe BROTHER'S
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Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
West North East South
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“How could I have figured
that out?” asked East.
“Not easy,” replied West.
"It is the sort of play that
world champions are sup-
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Pass 3 NT ■ Pass Pass
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it wasn't that difficult. That
king of clubs was going
useless unless I held
queen or jack. Hence, it was
of no value to you.”
By Oswald Jacoby Curiously enough, if South
and James Jacoby had known that hearts were
divided six-two, he could
South beamed happily as have prevented that possible
he scored game and rubber, jettison by winning the sec-
He had held off until the ond heart,
third heart. Then he entered
dummy with the queen of (newspaper enterprise assn.)
HAVING SOME
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THE DISEASE DETECTIVES,
y Gerald Astor. NAL Books. 216
ages. $14.95.
As medically advanced as
merica is, we still aren’t free
,, from epidemics: tuberculosis
E
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Answer to Previous Puzzle
ACROSS 42 Trouble
44 Fencing
t Prison sword
5 Gossips 46 Reinforce
9 Pull 49 Brainy
12 Wild party 53 Gallic
13 Greenland's ” affirmative -0
colonizer 54 Sadness (Fr.) j j
14 Nigerian tribe 56 Swift aircraft ||
15 City in Spain
17 Time period 57 Selves
58 Cleave
59 Filthy hut
60 Went by car
61 Mouths (si.)
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infects 30,000 annually, flu strikes
millions, and there are some
JO,000 cases of syphilis each year.
New types of disease such as
Legionnaires’
Shock Syndrome and AIDS pop up (abbr.)
unexpectedly. And if smallpox j® $lumber
was at last pronounced extinct on 21 Devours
jafth in 1980, there are still 23 Speck
periodic eruptions of the deadly 24 New Deal
project (abbr.)
27 Animal waste t A bunch
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BAYTOWN AREA WOMEN'S CENTER
45 Grinding
stone
46 Supervisor
47 Ostracize------
48 Therefore
50 Huge
continent
51 Invitation re-
sponse {abbr.)
52 River in
•* England
55. Compass
point
11 Habit
16 Shoulder (Fr.)
20 Greek colony
.....22 Lovelock
24 Ergo
25 Outlet
26 Fact
28 Fabulist
DOWN
ie.
OFFICE: 427-2421
itrusfed with the task of-
CRISIS: 422-2292
2 Russian —
inland sea
3 Fairy tale
creature
4 School (Fr.)
5 Become firm 30 killed
31 At this place
33 Sorts
35 Loathe
40 Punctuatipn
mark
controlling and monit^ing these 29 po* Ogden
epidemics is a federal \ agency ......
called the Centers for Disease 32 Razz
34 Non-
X
t
Control. With headquarters in
Atlanta, it employs close to 4,000
poisonoiis
. - . ..... 36 Loosens 6 Stir
people — doctors^,microbiologist, 37 Caulking, for 7 Crooner
toxicologists, veterinarians, tech-
nicians and support staff.
in his “The Disease Detec-
tives,” Gerald Astor, a
writer-editor, tells how the CDC "
went about fighting some recent
epidemics and how epidemiologi-
cal work and police wor-k-have si-
milarities.
While police detectives pursue
a flesh-and-blood murderer, CDC
scientists attempt to identify a
virus, bacterium or rickettsia,
figure out how it is spreading and
how it can be stopped. “Some
members Hof the CDC) admit,”
Astor writes, “that as kids they 32
had ambitions for the life of a
private eye or a policeman.”
The case histories presented
here make gripping reading
because the material has inherent
suspense and thrill in it. Medical
reporting of this type, however, is ^
nothing new. Berton Roueche has
written many articles on epide-
miology which are now regarded
as classics. Astor’8 book makes a °
3:15 5il5 7115 9:15
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2 THE STRONGEST MAN 1
» ON EARTH '
BAY PLAZA B
1:15
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8 Burn .
9 Schedule
10 Kimono sash 43 Aqustic
animal
one
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LOU
38 Daze
39 Smudge
4t Domestic
animal
N. Hwy 146
‘422 555? -
FERRIGNO
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ALL SEATS-ALL TIMES
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PAUL DOOLEY
QAV^HOMAS : RICK MORANI!
MOMA1A -77': '
66
57
complement to them.
/ 59
61
60
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Brown, Leon. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 274, Ed. 1 Friday, September 16, 1983, newspaper, September 16, 1983; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1153620/m1/5/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.