The Prince George Citizen, TV TIMES - June 25th, 1994 - 51 TUESDAY, June 28th CO) Radio France Internationale 12:30 2) (:35) Who’s the Boss? Tony agrees not to pressure Angela about marriage, then develops an elaborate plan to propose at a football game. (S) (Part 2 of 2) (CC) [2](T) Coronation Street QD (:37) Arsenio Hall: The Best of Arsenio From 1991: actors Harrison Ford (“Regarding Henry”), Richard Grieco (“Mobsters") and Sean Young, music group Rythm Syndicate. (R) (S) (CC) QD[12] (:35) Late Show (S) (CC) 07) Overnight gg RapCity (2D Paid Program g§ Jeffersons A power blackout hits the city and looters hit George's stores. (CC) g§ Inside Stories A mother tries to fulfill her departed son’s final request — to be buried in cement. 12:45 © (:50) Late Night From May: actor George Wendt, music group the Indigo Girls, Court TV anchor Jack Ford. (R) (S) 07) Newsroom (CC) 1:00 (D (:05) Growing Pains © (:05) Bertice Berry (9) Today’s Japan QD Movie ★ * * * “Horse Feathers” (1932, Comedy) The Marx Brothers, Thelma Todd. A college president recruits two unlikely gridiron greats after gamblers beef up a rival school’s football team. 07) Overnight got Soul in the City (2D Paid Program (24) Laverne & Shirley (25) Can We Shop (26) Rocky and Bullwinkle g3 Midday (CC) 1:30 (D Northern Response QD (:37) Paid Program © Charlie Rose QD[12] (:35) Movie *** “Angel Heart” (1987, Drama) Mickey Rourke, Robert De Niro. Alan Parker's controversial story of a detective’s plunge into a world of voodoo, mysticism and murder in New Orleans. 07) Showbiz Today (2D Paid Program g3 Jeffersons (CC) gfel Get Smart 1:45 © (:50) Later 2:00 fTI Northern Response (D (:07) Paid Program © (:05) News (CC) QD International Auto Show 07) Sports Latenight (R) go) Videoflow (2D Paid Program (24) Gomer Pyle, USMC (25) Can We Shop g6) Flipper (23 Market Place (CC) 2:15 © (:20) Paid Program 2:30 © Northern Response QD (:37) News © (:35) ABC World News Now (CC) © Serious Money QD New Wilderness 07) Daybreak (CC) (2D Paid Program (24) Headline News (26l Home and Away g3 Business World (CC) 2:45 © (:50) NBC News Nightside 3:00 © Northern Response QD (:12) CBS News Up to the Minute © Fighter Pilot’s Story (CC) QD Spies QD Sportsdesk (CC) (Wl Country Music Television (2D Bookmice (24) Three Stooges gl To Be Announced g3 CBC Moming News gl This Week in Bible Prophecy (3p Radio France Internationale 3:30 f2] Northern Response QjD[12] (:35) Family Ties (CC) as A&E Preview as Caribbean Workout 0Z) Business Morning (2D Join In! g4) (:35) Yogi & Friends gl Kenneth Copeland gl Life Lessons 4:00 SD Northern Response as Classroom QD Sportsdesk (CC) (0 Daybreak (CC) gg Frenchklss (2D Zoobilee Zoo (CC) g3 (:05) Jetsons gl In Touch gl John Hagee Today 4:30 S) Northern Response © NBC News at Sunrise (CC) © American Vacations as Bodyshaping 03 Business Day gg RapCity (2D Iris, the Happy Professor gl (:35) Tom & Jerry’s Funhouse gl Benny Hinn Inside Canada Tremonti’s second career choice full of real-life drama by TED SHAW Anna Maria Tremonti laughs when someone suggests she has a glamorous job as a foreign correspondent. CBC’s Berlin correspondent has Deen spending most of her time lately in the war zone of Bosnia. She remembers vividly one of her first assignments there “It was the summer of 1992 and I was in a van loaded with cans of gasoline,” Tremonti says during an interview while in Toronto. “The only way we could go was across the airport runv.ay in Sarajevo with the Seres on one side and the Bosnians on the other.” Tremonti simply stared at her shoelaces and hoped there wouldn’t be any gunfire. “i guess you could say I felt sheer terror,” she says. At 37, Tremonti has reported from many of the world’s political hot spots, including Panama, the Middle East and Soviet Georgia. But one of her most frightening experiences came at home in 1988 while covering a federal election campaign. The plane she was on had to crash- land when its wheels failed to function. “It’s funny but I never thought I might die,” Tremonti says. “All I could think about was this is how people die in planes.” Even at that moment, Tremonti maintained a reporter’s objectivity. The Windsor, Ont., native got into journalism almost by accident. She entered University of Windsor planning to pursue a career in drama. “I thought journalists were people who couldn’t get jobs writing books and things,” she says. But while there, she got involved with the student paper and took a course in television and radio arts. She got hooked. At the urging of a friend, Tremonti sent an audition tape to a radio station in New Glasgow, N.S., and to her surprise was offered a job. She called herself Terry Tremonti at the time, thinking her real name would be too long for radio. Six years later, she was hired by CBC-Edmonton, working in radio and TV. In 1987, she was transferred to CBC’s Ottawa bureau, then, four years later, was sent to Berlin. Later this summer, Tremonti will be assigned to the London bureau. “One thing I’ve learned in this business,” she says, “is you shouldn’t plan too much. You can think about what you want to do ... but you may not end up where you planned.” Tremonti says she has trouble relating war stories: “I’ve always felt a little self-conscious about that because I’m just passing through. “In a place like Sarajevo, where there is constant shelling, how do people who have to stay there and know they have no way out, how do they handle it again and again and again?” IT’S A MATTER OF LIFE Al BREATH DON’T SMOKE British Columbia Lung Assodation