Drama as real as real life. Issues as current as today's headlines. An idea as old as America. VC\ kk • A ti, 1AAA A A Introducing Court TV. From the prominent attorneys charged in the BCC( banking scandal, to the case of a man who was pulled from his truck and beaten during the rioting in South Central Los Angeles, the real life drama of justice is as riveting and as important today as when our rule of law was first written. The founding fathers wanted us to watch our system of justice at work. And so courtrooms were built with large audience galleries, and the community came to court to watch trials that were the talk of the town. Now, in the satellite age, there's the Courtroom Television Network, the 24-hour basic cable channel that takes you to courtrooms across the country. Now you can watch television that is as current as today's headlines, covering the most important issues of the day: crime and punishment, free expression, fault or no fault, even love and marriage. All without the soundbite version of it or some "docudrama" mangling of it. With Court TV's camera crews and satellite hicks, backed by the best team of legal journalists ever assembled, America can watch the real life drama of justice unfold live, as it happens. And so an idea as old as America has now become the inspiration for America's next cable breakthrough. WATCH COURT TV ON AID-ing Israel CHANNEL 11! On Jerusalem MONDAY-FRIDAY 1:00 A.M.-6:00 P.M. SATURDAY 2:00 A.M.-4:00 RM. SUNDAY 1:00 A.M.-1:00 P.M. Watching the real life drama of justice. Eliot Engel COURTROOM TELEVISION NETWORK la Continental Cablevision® M* E- 4 SIDEWALK SALE SDAY • FRIDAY • SATURDAY • SUNDAY JULY 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 Arbor Drugs Baskin Robbins Bravo! Gourmet Coffees Dress Barn Frames Unlimited Gifts of Nature Great Lengths Hair Care Greg Shoes Jenny Craig Weight Loss Centre Kae's Hallmark Shop Kroger Kwang's Chop Suey Little Ceasar's Lolipop Kids (Within Roupen the Tailor) Mail Boxes Etc. Michigan National Bank Moore Shoe Repair New York Bagel Pickle Barrel Deli Powerhouse Gym Ritz Camera One Hour Photo Roupen the Tailor Dr. Bernard Sanders Family Dentistry Silkcorp Factory Outlet Somerset Cleaners Subway Sandwiches & Salads Tanfaster Travel One You Name It (Within Greg Shoes) W hen it comes to Jerusalem, Israel's sup- porters on Capitol Hill believe that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. So when Israeli newspapers reported that the State Depart- ment's Agency for International Development (AID) might open an office in east Jerusalem to process economic assistance for the new Palestinian self-rule en- tity in Gaza and Jericho, Israel's friends on Capitol Hill sprang into action. But it was all just a misun- derstanding, J. Brian Atwood, AID's administrator, told a group of agitated legislators at a meet- ing last week convened by Rep. Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., and Rep. Ben Gilman, R-N.Y. Mr. Atwood promised that there would be no new AID office in east Jerusalem and that the administration would be sensi- tive to Jerusalem's special status as the effort to provide an eco- nomic boost to the Palestinians gets off the ground. He also said the agency might expand its current operation in the western part of the city. "I told him that I would not look kindly on any expanded All) presence in Jerusalem," Mr. En- gel said in an interview. "It would be ludicrous for them to meet with PLO officials in any part of the city." Israeli officials had concluded more than a week ago that press reports about the pending AID decision were exaggerated. As a result, the government in Jerusalem maintained a scrupu- lously low profile as the contro- versy erupted in Washington. That attitude did not impress Rep. Engel. "They're not alarmed by a lot of things I think they should be alarmed about," he said. Leading pro-Israel activists suggested that last week's flurry of activity served a useful pur- pose even if it was premature. "The State Department was al- ready working closely with the Israelis to accommodate their sensitivities on this," said Jess Hordes, Washington director for the Anti-Defamation League. "But I think it was a timely and appropriate intervention for leg- islators to let the State Depart- ment know that they have an ongoing interest in how this plays out." No To Golan Peacekeepers LLJ Cn LLI CC F- LU LLI 50 JAMES D. BESSER WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENT Your Neighborhood Specialty and Convenience Center 12 MILE & EVERGREEN Conservative pro-Israel activists continue their stealth effort to block any possible U.S. peace- keeping role on the Golan Heights. Aides convinced Sen. Thad Cochran, R-Miss., to introduce an amendment requiring an ex- haustive study before American troops could be committed as peacekeepers. But that amend- ment was withdrawn after an ag- itated Israeli embassy and the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (ALPAC) made the ar- gument that legislative action was really intended to preempt any return of territory on the