I I I THE UNIVERSITY DARY GANSAM entertainment HOROSCOPES Because the stars know things we don't. Aries (March 21-April 19) Today is a 7 Aries (March 21- April 9) is a day 7 Schedule your agreements, especially where finances are concerned. Charm customers with extra value, and reap long-term rewards. Be patient, and keep up momentum. Taurus (April 20-May 20) . Today is a 9 Give in to full self-expression; you've got the confidence and power. What will you create? Who will you be? You've got a blank canvas. Let your passions hold the brush. Gemini (May 21-June 21) Today is an 8 There's a tendency to overthink everything now. Don't get stuck in your head. Get into a conversation with someone who can see beyond your view. Cancer (June 22-July 22) Today is a 9 Your charm is magnetic, and others gravitate to your orbit. Opportunities for romance abound and could even be overwhelming. Express your feelings. Art helps. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Today is an 8 Your skills are garnering attention, both in your career and relationships. It's easier to have intimate conversations. Get a sexy new outfit, and show off your moves. Today is an 8 Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is an 8 Even if you don't hear about it, your ideas are gaining recognition. You're not in it for the glory, though. Experiment with new concepts for inner satisfaction. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Today is a 9 Discuss shared finances during the next few days. Review your money plan and goals. You're worth more than you thought. Increase your income by playing your cards wisely. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Today is an 8 Now it's easier to make personal decisions that were difficult before. Words come easily when it comes to love, even in the face of obstacles. Share your heart. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Today is a 9 Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today is a 7 Romance sparks for the next two days. Add fuel to the fire with a little mystery. You don't need to reveal everything at once. Separation can make the heart grow fonder. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Today is an 8 Home improvement satisfies. You're very persuasive now and know just what to say to an influential female. Respectfully advance your career. Pisces (Feb..19-March 20) Today is an 8 You've got the memory and concentration for some serious study. Choose a topic that you feel strongly about, and accept rigorous coaching. Toss the ball to a teammate. 1 Navigator's stack 5 Deck in the ring 9 Upper surface 12 Oil cartel 13 Leading man? 14 "Hail, Caesar!" 15 Pianist's ticker 17 Barbie's companion 18 Agreement 19 No stay-at-homes 21 Lindbergh book 22 Plot mathematically 24 Back talk 27 Greet the villain 28 Grant's — 31 Thickness 32 Once around the track 33 Long March leader 34 Yin coun- 36 Salt Lake athlete 37 Titanic's destroyer 38 Knighted women 40 "Monopoly" square 41 Increase in troop levels 43 Antenna 47 Yoko of music 48 Houston sports venue 51 Poorly lit 52 Squad 53 Rams' fans? 54 Chowed down 55 Stitches CHECK THE ANSWERS AT http://udkne.ws/o83ECY 56 Carry on DOWN 1 NYC cultural center 2 "Planet of the —" 3 Household critters 4 Threaded nails 5 Philosopher Immanuel 6 Big bother 7 Sweet potato 8 Last letter 9 After-taxes 10 Finished Back back contents invisible close por) 22 "The Men Who Stare at —" 23 Lasso 24 Agent 25 In the manner of 26 Stockholm — 27 Sad 29 Scratch 30 Cranberry territory 35 Joke 37 Edge 39 Butcher's wares 40 Earth (Pref.) 41 Pop 42 Troop group 43 Weaponry 44 Midwest state 45 "So be it" 46 For fear that 49 Witness 50 Playing marble THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2011 10-13 CRYPTOQUIP KJDZSEC PN ZXYAEJY SE AKXA Y I R R J Y N K X H D J M A P J M J J D S E C X C Y J X A H J E H J I M X B B I P Z D S B J - P J E A. Yesterday's Cryptoquip: THINGS BECAME SO ABNORMALLY SILENT AT THE RECYCLING PLANT THAT YOU COULD HEAR A BIN DROP. Today's Cryptoquip Clue: B equals C THE NEXT PANEL CRYPTOQUIP SUDOKU Conceptis Sudoku Difficulty Level ★★★ | | 5 | | 9 | | 1 | | 2 | | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | 9 | | 2 | | | | 5 | | 4 | | | 4 | | | | | | 7 | | | 4 | | | 1 | | 8 | | | 5 | | | | | | | | | | | | 6 | | | 5 | | 4 | | | 7 | | | 3 | | | | | | 4 | | | 2 | | 7 | | | | 9 | | 6 | | | 9 | | 2 | | 7 | | 5 | | 10/13 ELSEWHERE time. "I grew up in Utah, where it was filmed," she said in a telephone interview. "That was one of my favorite movies are "OKAY, OKAY...I'm SORRY I DREW ON YOUR FACE WHEN YOU PASSED OUT AND IT ENDED UP OPENING A PORTAL TO HELL ON YOUR FOREHEAD." Nick Sambaluk SEATTLE — You may know Julianne Hough from "Dancing with the Stars," but now she's dancing with the kids from Bomont High. Hough wasn't yet born when the original 1984 "Footloose" arrived on the screen, starring Kevin Bacon as a dancing teen rebel and Lori Linger as a minister's daughter. But she's been a fan of the movie for a long ing up. I've seen it a gazillion times." MCCLATCHY TRIBUNE movies grow- TV dancer takes role in new Footloose film PAGE 4 In the new "Footloose," Hough (pronounced "Huff") takes over MOVIES CARPENTER Nick Sambaluk Hough A champion ballroom dancer since her early teens. Hough had to adjust her style for Brewer and choreographer Jamal Sims. "They didn't want it to look like a music video," she said, "or too perfect or pristine; they wanted it to be very real. Craig would tell me to tone it down a bit, so I didn't look so much like I knew what I was doing." Singer's role of Ariel — a role that was a long time coming. WHERE: MACELI'S BANQUET HALL 1031 NEW HAMPSHIRE WHO: ALPHA GAMMA DELTA SORORITY, ALPHA TAU OMEGA FRATERNITY, & YOU! WE HOPE TO SEE YOU THERE! WHAT: A FUN & CASUAL DATE AUCTION BENEFITING DIABETES RESEARCH WHEN: SUNDAY, 10/16 AT 6PM TELEVISION CBS mocks MTV show after idea to buy it LOS ANGELES — It doesn't matter how many body shots and tanning sessions you offer her — CBS' entertainment honcho wants no part of "Jersey Shore." At a TV executives' panel in Beverly Hills Tuesday, moderator Jeff Probst of "Survivor" fame asked his boss, CBS Entertainment President Nina Tassler, if she would buy "Jersey Shore" — MTV's smash reality soap about hard-partying, hardly-if-ever introspective young people — if she had the chance. Tassler laughed and remarked that her husband is from New Jersey, so she's "familiar with that whole world." "You would have made 12 cents on that show!" Kevin Reilly, Tassler's counterpart at Fox and a fellow panelist, said. "Exactly," Tassler agreed. "It's not delivering the kind of numbers we need to have a hit TV show" on CBS. McClatchy Tribune TELEVISION Episode to air on 'Co-Ed Butcher' I MCCLATCHY TRIBUNE The slayings committed by Edmund Emil Kemper III — who is 6 feet 9 inches tall and dubbed "Big Ed" or "The Co-Ed Killer" SANTA CRUZ, Calif. — A new television documentary will air Friday about a man convicted of killing eight women, including his mother, grandmother and a pair of University of California Santa Cruz students in a murder spree that ended in 1973. — were part of a grim series of mass murder investigations in the county in the 1970s. "The Co-Ed Butcher" is an episode of the weekly series "Twisted" that will air at 10 p.m. EDT Friday on the channel Investigation Discovery. The episode was shot by a British crew that visited Santa Cruz County in May and interviewed investigators, defense attorneys and others who tracked Kemper. It aired in Great Britain and was later adapted for American TV, said Charlotte Bigford, a publicist for Investigation Discovery. "Even if I were a local watching it again and again, it lives up to the name — it is a twisted thing to watch," Bigford said. After a series of psychological tests, authorities released Kemper at age 21. He followed his mother to UCSC, where she worked. Kemper, now 62, was convicted of killing eight women from 1964 to 1973. He was born in Burbank and killed his grandmother at age 15 after an argument. He told authorities he wanted to see how it would feel to kill her. Kemper got a job with the state highway department and befriended police while he resumed his killings. He picked up two UCSC students who needed a ride and killed them — cutting their bodies into pieces and burying body parts in the backyard of his apartment, authorities said. Former Watsonville police chief Terry Medina, who was a detective with the Sheriff's Office in 1972, investigated the murders and was interviewed for the documentary. Later that year, Kemper led authorities to a head buried at his home, body parts off Summit Road in the Santa Cruz Mountains and other locations. Medina said it triggered some lurid memories from that era — but that happens often, he said. In part because Kemper was friendly with law enforcement, the murders were not pinned on him until he called Santa Cruz authorities from a Colorado pay phone to confess in 1973. "You can't drive around too much without passing something or seeing something that reminds you of some homicide or another from those days," Medina said. He said the filmmakers worked hard to talk to talk to people involved in Kemper's case — from state psychologists to a former Santa Cruz Sentinel reporter who covered the body discoveries and the trial. Former UCSC police chief Micky Aluffi, another investigator, also was interviewed for the program. ---