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  • elevision Critic DAVID BIANCULLI on the new season opener of the Simpson''s show, which begins tonight; and also the season''s end of the Larry Sanders''s Show, which stars Gary Shandling.
  • 2: Terry Anderson and wife, Madeleine Bassil, continued.
  • CLAPTON interview continued. REV.: Rock critic KEN TUCKER reviews the debut album, "If I Ever Fall in Love," by the new vocal group, Shai. (pronounced "Shy"). They have a hit single with the same name as the album, on MCA. REV.: Film critic STEPHEN SCHIFF reviews "Falling Down," the new film starring Michael Douglas.
  • Classical music critic LLOYD SCHWARTZ on the new trend in Baroque music performance.
  • Film critic STEPHEN SCHIFF reviews "Mad Dog & Glory," starring Robert Deniro and Bill Murray.
  • John Leonard reviews "New York Days" (Little, Brown, & Co.) by Willie Morris.
  • Country music impresario, BUDDY KILLEN. For many years KILLEN was the head of Tree International, Nashville's leading music publisher, writer and producer. KILLEN once played bass in Hank Williams' band for ten dollars a night; in 1989 he sold Tree to Sony for 50 million. He's worked with just about every star in the Country firmament: Elvis Presley (Tree published "Heartbreak Hotel"), Dolly Parton (KILLEN signed her when she was fourteen), Willie Nelson (was a songwriter for Tree); and many classics in the Country cannon: "King of the Road", "Okie from Muskogee" and the immortal "D-I-V-O-R-C-E". KILLEN's new autobiography is "By the Seat of My Pants" (Simon & Sch
  • HOWELL RAINES is editorial page editor of "The New York Times." He's written a new "fishing" memoir, that's part sporting autobiography, and part guide-book for the middle years of life. "Fly Fishing Through the Midlife Crisis," (William Morrow & Company). RAINES also won the Pulitzer Prize for "Grady's Gift," a New York Times Magazine article about his friendship with a black woman in segregated Birmingham.
  • 2: Documentary filmmakers D.A. PENNEBAKER & CHRIS HEGEDUS. Their film, The War Room, is a behind the scenes look at the Clinton presidential campaign from the New Hampshire primary to the election. Pennebaker and Hegedus chronicled the campaign through the eyes of its two main strategists, James CArville and George Stephanopoulos.
  • One of Israel's leading journalists, TOM SEGEV (pronounced like NEGA in negative). He has a new book,"The Seventh Million: The Israelis and The Holocaust," (Hill & Wang) in which he argues that some Israelis use the holocaust to encourage Israeli chauvinism and aggression. SEGEV writes a weekly column on politics and human rights for the daily newspaper "Haaretz."
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