PAOt 14 Bono's £k$tro*2/uc i by Lillian Bono Week of November 8-14 SCORPIO qp "Vi- (October 24 - November 22) An associate may be resorting to trickory in order to win the favor of someone else you have been working with. SAGITTARIUS m (November 23 • December 21) You might change your opinion on a difficult subject because of information that you could suddenly learn. CAPRICORN (December 22 • January 20) Before committing yourself to a business venture get to know the other people involved or you might regret it. AQUARIUS (January 21 • February 19) Circumstances beyond your control could occur and make a project difficult to complete on time without some aid. PISCES (February 20 - March 20) Listen to the advice of relatives where domestic affairs are concerned. Your finances could increase suddenly. tHfc (March 21 - April 20) Someone who is envious of you might be gossiping about everything you do. Put an end to these rumors quickly. ARIES TAURUS (ft (April 21 - May 21) You may not be sure which direction you should be going in career wise because of advice others are giving you. GEMINI (May 22 - June 21) Refrain from losing your temper with a loved one who means well. Business affairs should be attended to quickly. CANCER H8g (June 22 - July 23) Financial dealings may run more smoothly because of an associate's hefp. This person could come in handy again. LEO « (July 24 - August 23) Uninvited guests may wreak havoc in your home unless you make it clear that you want to put an end to this behavior. VIRGO ££ (August 24 • September 23) Small animals could need a lot of love and attention from you. It may be difficult to finish a project on time. LIBRA (September 24 • October 23) Making hasty decisions might inot be in your best interests. Family members should be kept aware of a situation. For your current, personalized astrological chart, send a $10 money order along with your name, address and birthday (day, month and year) to: Miss Lillian Bono, P.O. Box 123, Lyndhurst. N.J. 07071. jumuk nr. iiivifit ft by Joey Sasso CONFIDENTIAL REPORT: Jock Ewing will die in a South American helicopter crash on CBS' "Dallas." Steve Kanaly, who plays Ray Krebbs in the hit TV series, detail ed the plans to eliminate the character played by Jim Davis, who died earlier this year. "The character stays alive for 12 shows, goes on business to South America for the government, and we have telephone calls and letters from him," Kanaly said. "Somebody will be talking to him on the phone and [then] say, 'I just had a telephone call from Daddy. He misses you all. He'll be coming home in a month or so.' This goes on until he finally crashes in a helicopter in South America." Was any thought given to letting another actor play the character? "We would all have been insulted if they had recast the role," Kanaly said. "You can't replace an actor like that." TV BACKSTAGE: Psychologists fear that the return to ex cessive violence on the new prime-time television shows this fall will result in increased paranoia among the elder ly, overly aggressive children and more unruly juvenile delinquents. The new fall TV line-up is more violent than ever before, the experts say. There are no new "jiggle" shows like "Three's Company." The networks are replac ing sex with violence. They have recycled old law and order shows and stars like Mike Connors in "Today's FBI," James Arness as a city cop and James Garner as "Bret Maverick." If you add to that list three new cop series, you can bet there will be lots of bullets flying this fall. And experts on the impact of television violence on the population are worried. TV CLOSEUP: " 'Dr. Who,' BBC-TV's amazing sci-fi series of 172 half-hours, which has been a hit in England for over 18 years and now playing in 30 coun tries around the globe, has been sold in 11 more U.S. markets," announced Wynn Nathan, President of Lionheart Television . . . CBS newsman Mike Wal lace says a TV interviewer needs "fresh eyes." That, Wallace explains, is a "kind of innocence, a willingness to learn, to hear something taneously, to be surprised, to take chances." Who has fresh eyes? Barbara Waiters, Dick Cavett, Bil Moyers, Phil Donahue and Johnny Carson. .. Despite his ef forts to remain a detached professional journalist, Ted Koppei has become a sex symbol. He has joined the likes of Erik Estrada, Tom Seiieck and even Tom Brokaw That's the nature of "TV--It makes stars of everyone, from actor to newsman. Koppei, of course, is the anchor for ABC News "Nightline," the late-news program that com petes with Johnny Carson and reruns for bedtime viewers. As far as talk of being anything but a newsman, Koppei says laughingly, "Obviously, it's very gratifying." TV COMMM.OO URVtCCt. INC., Dr. Who new, to respond spon-