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Show 12 The Signpost - Wednesday, May 3 1, 1989 Topping the Charts.. U.S. Albums 1) Fine Young Cannibals 1) Love And Rockets The Raw & The Cooked Love and Rockets 2) Madonna 2) The Pixies Like A Prayer Doolittle 3) Tone-Loc 3) The Cure Loc-ed After Dark Disintergration 4) The Cult 4) XTC Sonic Temple Oranges and Lemons 5) Living Colour 5) Sidewinders Vivid Witchdoctor 6) Guns N' Roses 6) The Cult GnR'Lies Sonic Temple 7) Beaches 7) TheConnells Soundtrack Fun & Games 8) Bobby Brown 8) Robyn Hitchcock Don't Be Cruel Queen Elvis 9) RoyOrbison 9) Joe Jackson Mystery Girl Blaze and Glory 10) Paula Abdul 10) House of Freaks Forever Your Girl Tantilla British Albums 1) Holly Johnson 6) Deacon Blue Blast When The World Ki 2) Simply Red 7) Soul II Soul A New Flame Club Classics 3) Gloria Estefan 8) Madonna Anything For You Like A Prayer 4) Fine Young Cannibals 9) INXS The Raw & The Cooked Kick College Albums 5) Bangles Everything 10) Guns N' Roses Appetite For Destruction Better Quality X f at a Fair Better Price ,if 'T ' .'.. , U x . " 4 . ' - Guarantee: if your diamond does not appraise in writing (within 30 days of purchase) for AT LEAST 40 more than your purchase price, your money will be refunded. 2434 Washingtion Blvd. "The Rock" has been found. Congratulations Treavor Moss. Photographs to be exhibited Hand-tinted photographs by Susan Church are on exhibit at the Loge Gallery, located on the mezzanine at Pioneer Memorial Theatre. The University of Utah gallery will present Church's work June 2-17 in conjunction with Pioneer Theatre Company's production of "Noises Off." Church studied art and photography at Weber State College, receiving her bachelors degree in 1983. Since graduating, she has traveled extensively throughout the Western United States, including Washington, Oregon and California. Her most recent trips have been to the East Coast: with Maine, New York, and Florida presenting the most impressive and outstanding photo opportunities, according to the artist The Loge Gallery exhibit will feature Church's older photographs and some of her most recent "A lot of my photographs tend to be isolated and some have a feeling of tranquility and harmony with their surroundings," she says. "Even in such a large and populated area as New York, the people seem to be a little isolated from each other." Her photographs, "Lazy Afternoon," "Walking in the Park One Day," and "Catching a Cab," illustrate this feeling. Church says she enjoys all aspects of her craft. She says she sees the overall picture before she photographs it,butnever decides on color or texture until the photo has been developed. "I have a chance to use neat colors," says Church. "I know buildings are not orange and purple, but sometimes that's how I see them, so I color them that way and people really seem to like it. And if it doesn't come our right I can change it." The Loge Gallery is open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday and during intermissions of "Noises Off." For further information, call 581-7118. KSL to celebrate turning f40f KSL Television, Channel 5, celebrates its 40th Anniversary on June 1, 1989. In honor of the anniversary, KSL Television will air a 60-minute documentary celebrating the past four decades of television broadcasting in Utah. The program will be shown Wednesday, May 3 1 , at 9 p.m. The program is called "Five Hits Forty," and recalls some of. the memorable people, events and mishaps that have marked KSL's history. KSL Television began with two and one-half hours of regularly scheduled programs each evening, most of which were received from CBS, ABC and DuMont Shhh i Now hear this! Save over $200.0 on IBM Computer Systems PS2 Model on ooc 502 A im mmmmmmmmmmsmm PS2 Model 70 Contact Bill Tribe, 627-2300 your Customer Education specialist ALL RIAEC 4071 Riverdale Road (Next to Fred Meyer) ViSlCOSVI, Advanced Products Oeaiei Networks. Its first telecast in 1949 reached an esumated 2,500 television viewers in the Salt Lake City area. As with other television pioneers, KSL Television began as an extension of a radio station, KSL Radio. After World War II, KSL seriously explored television and by 1948, made the financial commitment to the infant industry and placed its stake in the . future of television. Following several successful experiments with closed-circuit television, KSL aired its first broadcast while large crowds of curious on-lookers stood in front of store windows and radio shops. Television set purchases increased and in time, skeptical advertisers began to realize the potential of a medium which has so infatuated the public. In 1952, KSL Television moved their transmitter to Farnsworth Peak, in the Oquirrh Range west of Salt Lake City. This gave KSL the second highest transmitter in America. By 1964, KSL Television was broadcasting in color. By 1978, it substantially increased its power and transmission quality and, in 1985 began broadcasting in stereo. KSL moved to its present "Broadcast House" at Salt Lake City's Triad Center in the spring of 1984. Today, KSL Television's signal reaches over 1.7 million people throughout seven western states comprising the largest coverage area in the United States. It has become the flagship of the 13 broadcasting facilities owned and operated by Bonneville International Corporation. Mon. -Fri. 9 a.m. -6 p.m Saturday 10 a.m. -4 p.m |