
Liberty Weekend: President Reagan presides over relighting of renovated Statue of Liberty. America rededicated the Statue of Liberty in a blaze of light, marking its centennial as a beacon of hope in New York Harbor. President Reagan “unveiled” the monument by triggering a 1.4-million-watt series of laser beams that shot a mile across the harbor and bathed the statue in successive stages of red, blue and white light. Then, after a program of music and dance, speeches and swearing-in ceremonies for new citizens, the statue’s torch flamed into golden brilliance.
Under starlit skies, in view of a newly resplendent Statue of Liberty, Ron Ranvindran, Sadye Lee Vassil, Riva Sagalova, Thanh Tran, Mikhail Baryshnikov, Arman Amazallag, Samson Arshansky and Pirkko Antonopoulos became Americans last night. Along with 268 other men, women and children who had come to the United States from 100 countries, they were sworn in by Chief Justice Warren E. Burger on Ellis Island, the gateway to this country for more than 12 million immigrants and refugees. “Now I’m American!” shouted the jubilant Thanh Tran, 22 years old, who fled his native Vietnam eight years ago aboard a fragile, overcrowded boat. “I’m happy,” said Iluminada Rodriguez, 24, from the Dominican Republic, the first member of her family to become an American citizen. She was accompanied by her 80-year-old father, Bienvenido Rodriguez, who had worked as a dishwasher at the Waldorf-Astoria so that he could afford to bring his wife and six children to America. Last night, Mr. Rodriguez, too overcome to speak, just smiled and smiled upon his daughter.
Three great fleets advanced on New York City — sailing ships from the east, warships from the south and pleasure boats from everywhere. The Coast Guard said they formed an armada of 25,000 vessels.
The scene in Upper New York Bay was dizzying as aircraft crowded the skies and vessels covered the waters from shore to shore. Into this swirl steamed the Queen Elizabeth 2, flying a 100-foot-wide American flag and carrying 800 Chrysler Corporation dealers.
Traffic was light in Manhattan but the lure of crossing New York Harbor for only 25 cents proved so great that the police had to board Staten Island ferries and order people to disembark. A throng of 20,000 had formed to await ferries at Manhattan’s Battery Park when police officers started ordering passengers off and officials closed the ferries to cars.
The concept of the Statue of Liberty has always exceeded its physical presence. The icon is a global symbol of hope, freedom and opportunity for newcomers. Architects and engineers created her form, but millions of immigrants and their children and grandchildren who heard their stories created her spirit.
President Reagan, in a newspaper interview published today, said new Soviet arms control proposals “make me optimistic that we’re not only going to have a summit, but we’re going to have a summit where we can reach agreement on some of the goals that we share.” Mr. Reagan described a recent letter to him from Mr. Gorbachev, on arms control and other issues, as “quite a packet — and worthwhile.” The letter, according to newspaper accounts, included a compromise offer by Mr. Gorbachev on the issue of medium-range missiles.
French President Francois Mitterrand yesterday called Mikhail S. Gorbachev a “modern man,” the first the Soviet Union has had at the helm, a man with whom it was possible to negotiate an arms control agreement. Speaking in New York at a luncheon given by Elie Wiesel, the writer, Mr. Mitterrand sketched a warm portrait of Mr. Gorbachev, whom he said he knew better than did other Western European leaders. Mr. Mitterrand is scheduled to fly to Moscow on a three-day visit on Monday, returning a visit made by Mr. Gorbachev to Paris last October.
General Wojciech Jaruzelski was renamed First Secretary of the Polish Communist Party today, and three other generals were appointed to a new ruling Politburo. The elevation of the three officers reflected the degree to which General Jaruzelski dominated the five-day party congress that ended today. Strengthened by praise from Mikhail S. Gorbachev, the Polish leader steered the 1,800 delegates at the convention into virtually purging the Central Committee that was chosen at the last convention, in July 1981, during the heyday of the Solidarity movement. In the Communist hierarchy, the Central Committee, after being approved by the full convention, in turn names the top party bodies — the policy-making Politburo and the Secretariat, which carries out policy.
Kurt Waldheim’s wartime German army intelligence unit ordered the deportation of 2,500 Greek Jews to the Auschwitz death camp in July, 1944, according to a document unearthed by the World Jewish Congress. The German army document marks the first time the intelligence unit in the Balkans has been linked to actually ordering Jewish deportations to the camp. Waldheim, now Austrian president-elect, has repeatedly denied knowing of such deportations.
Five masked gunmen escaped with $12.5 million after robbing a bank in Saint-Nazaire on the Brittany coast of France, authorities said. The take, from a branch of the Bank of France, exceeds the $11.5 million stolen from the Caisse d’Epargne in Paris in 1980, France’s largest previous bank robbery. Police said the gunmen first broke into a cashier’s apartment above the bank and shot him while he grappled for a gun. The bandits then awakened the bank director in a neighboring apartment and took him hostage. They waited at the bank for arriving employees, getting the keys to the safe from one of them. The cashier was in satisfactory condition at a hospital, and the bank director was released.
President Reagan participates in a briefing with senior White House staff to prepare for his upcoming meeting with President Mitterrand of France.
Israeli Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir has broken his silence on the security scandal, specifically denying that he was involved in a cover-up of the 1984 killings of two captured Palestinian bus hijackers. Mr. Shamir said in a newspaper interview published today that he knew nothing of the matter until an agent of Shin Beth, the domestic intelligence agency, told Government leaders about the case last October.
Lebanese Christians and Muslims displayed rare unity as they joined in a general strike against the nation’s civil war and mounting economic crisis. The strike, organized by the General Confederation of Trade Unions, closed schools, shops, cafes, theaters, banks, courts, ports and airports throughout Lebanon. Only hospitals and pharmacies were open for emergencies. Lebanon has been racked by factional and communal fighting, disrupting the economy and fueling inflation, estimated at 20% a month.
The Emir of Kuwait, under pressure from the Persian Gulf war and falling oil prices, dissolved Parliament tonight and suspended several articles of the Constitution. The Emir, Sheik Jaber al-Ahmed al Sabah, announced the suspension of Parliament on television and said Kuwait’s “security has been exposed to a fierce foreign conspiracy which threatened lives and almost destroyed the wealth of the homeland.”
Philippine President Corazon Aquino will meet with President Reagan in Washington on September 17, officials there and in Manila announced. It will be their first meeting since Aquino took office in February after the ouster of former President Ferdinand E. Marcos. The Philippine president said in a television interview that she will seek more assistance from the United States and try to secure more liberal terms from banks on the country’s $26-billion foreign debt. Aquino attended college in the United States and lived in Massachusetts for three years with her husband, Benigno S. Aquino Jr., before he ended his self-exile and returned to Manila, where he was assassinated August 21, 1983.
Attorney General Edwin Meese 3d, answering questions from Mexican journalists, said today that the time had come for American officials to stop “pointing fingers across the border” at Mexico. His remarks come after nearly two months of open and sometimes bitter criticism of Mexico from a variety of United States officials over drug trafficking, illegal immigration, Mexican Government corruption and cooperation with American law enforcement. The criticisms have caused a rift in United States-Mexican relations, and White House officials said last week that President Reagan hoped to meet with President Miguel de la Madrid of Mexico this summer, in part to soothe relations.
Several hundred Nicaraguans have lost their jobs in the closing of the longtime opposition newspaper La Prensa. The Sandinistas now run both remaining daily newspapers, the two television channels and most radio stations. Roberto Sanchez is among several hundred people who are losing their jobs after the closing of La Prensa, the opposition newspaper. “It’s a sweet little story, what’s happened to me,” Mr. Sanchez said with a smile while sitting in La Prensa’s quiet newsroom this week. “This is the fourth job I’ve lost since the revolution, each time because the place I was working was shut down by the government.” The story of the journalist’s search for steady work illustrates the government’s continuing confrontation with news outlets it considers unpatriotic.
A land mine destroyed a truck loaded with passengers in northern Nicaragua, killing 32 people, including 12 children. the official Voice of Nicaragua radio reported. The government blamed U.S.-backed contra rebels. The radio I called the blast a “cold-blooded, premediated” attack using a “sophisticated” remote control device from the United States. Defense Ministry officials confirmed that the attack took place in Jinotega province but offered no details. The Foreign Ministry is preparing a protest to Washington.
A two-day strike by middle-class Chileans intent on driving President Augusto Pinochet from office ended with its organizers claiming success but with Pinochet seemingly as strong as ever. Five people were reported killed, 31 wounded and about 600 arrested. Police reported 75 bombings, including one that blacked out Santiago for 40 minutes. The Pinochet government imposed censorship on opposition radio stations, and national security charges were brought against two opposition magazines. The strike, called by a group of professional and labor organizations, drew no appreciable support from business or labor.
The Government of General Augusto Pinochet, reacting to a general strike called by opposition groups demanding a return to democracy, brought charges of inciting disorder against the protest leaders and two magazine editors today. In another sign of the crackdown, Chileans awoke without what many described as their main sources of public affairs news. Four radio stations, accused by the Government of encouraging violence through their aggressive coverage of strike activities, obeyed an order issued Wednesday night to limit their programming to music, commercials and Government pronouncements. The independent Human Rights Commission and newspapers quoting police sources said three teen-agers were shot to death Thursday night in Santiago neighborhoods patrolled by the army, The Associated Press reported. Aurelia Luca, a human rights worker, said residents told her one teen-ager was shot in the head by an army patrol that fired into a group of protesters, The A.P. said. Dr. Juan Luis Gonzalez and 16 other strike organizers said they would turn themselves in to the courts once they were advised in writing of the accusation that they had violated the state security law. Among other things, the law makes it a crime to incite “the illegal paralyzation of normal activities.”
Two white police officers were slightly wounded today when a bomb exploded at a Cape Town police station, the South African Government said. It was the 11th explosion since the authorities declared a state of emergency three weeks ago. The announcement coincided with an official statement that three more blacks had died in internecine feuding, bringing the total number of fatalities under the emergency to 100. Overall, almost 2,000 people, mostly blacks, have died in violence and protest in the segregated black townships since September 1984. The blast today, at the Mowbray police station in a white suburb, was the first under the emergency to be directed at the security forces. Previous explosions under the emergency have largely seemed directed at civilian targets. They killed three people and wounded about a hundred, many of them white. The Government has attributed the explosions to the outlawed African National Congress. The organization has declined to comment.
South African security forces detained more than 200 men and boys yesterday and evicted scores of women and children in a morning raid on two schools in a Cape Town suburb where people left homeless by recent violence had sought shelter, according to reports reaching the United States. Monitoring groups also reported the continuing arrest of anti-apartheid activists and church workers and said whole townships had been sealed off last week by the security forces, which conducted house-to-house searches.
U.S. Vice President Bush today called on the South African Government to begin negotiations with the black leadership toward the establishment of a “multiracial and truly democratic society — the sooner the better.” Speaking before a luncheon audience at the 77th annual convention of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People on its final day here, Mr. Bush said he shared the “indignation” many blacks have about the situation in South Africa. But he said he differed over whether total economic and political isolation of that country was the only way to achieve change.
Senate Finance Committee Chairman Bob Packwood, giving a boost to efforts to craft a final tax reform bill, said in an interview with the Portland Oregonian that he could accept a House idea of raising business taxes to help the middle class. Packwood (R-Oregon), who will lead Senate forces in the conference committee that will write a compromise tax overhaul measure, said the recent proposal from House Ways and Means Chairman Dan Rostenkowski (D-Illinois) was “a good agreement.” Rostenkowski had said that he would be willing to accept the lower tax rates in the Senate tax reform bill if the Senate would agree to boost corporate taxes to help the middle class.
President Reagan participates in a taping session of his radio address to the Nation on Independence Day and the Centennial of the Statue of Liberty.
James T. Broyhill is now a Senator from North Carolina. Governor James G. Martin appointed Mr. Broyhill, a 23-year member of the House, to complete the term of Senator John P. East, a fellow Republican who took his life Sunday. A 23-year veteran of Congress, Mr. Broyhill is a longtime friend and political ally of Mr. Martin, having served with him in the House for 12 years before Mr. Martin was elected Governor in 1984.
The Library of Congress, where budget cuts forced earlier closing hours that touched off protests and arrests last March, will return to its longer hours on Thursday. Library spokeswoman Nancy Bush said the shift back to longer daily hours and the reopening of the library on Sundays and holidays were made possible when President Reagan signed a supplemental appropriations bill. The bill included $867,000 for the library, including $247,000 earmarked for staffing to keep the library open later, Bush said.
The Food and Drug Administration issued a new rule that will require makers of prescription drugs-new and old-to report adverse reactions to their products. The reporting of adverse reactions until now has been a requirement for new drugs only, primarily those that have been brought to market since 1938, the FDA said. That includes about 90% of prescription drugs sold but leaves out 4,000 products.
The nation’s jobless rate fell two-tenths of a point, to 7 percent, in June as the economy generated 25 percent more new jobs than new job seekers, the Labor Department reported today. The White House took an upbeat view of the report, but economists said this gauge of employment conditions, based on a sampling of about 59,500 households, painted an overly reassuring picture of the job market and the state of the economy. The number of Americans employed, including 1,680,000 members of the armed forces who are stationed in the United States, totaled 111,353,000 in June, according to the survey of households. This was a gain of 556,000 job-holders.
Seven domestic terrorist acts killed two people and injured 10 in 1985, but the number of terrorist incidents was about half that of the previous year, the FBI reported. Jewish extremists were believed responsible for four of the domestic terrorist acts in 1985 — and both deaths — while Puerto Rican terrorists were blamed for two incidents, the FBI said.
Three members of the Puerto Rican terrorist group Armed Forces of National Liberation were arrested here today on charges of plotting to free their leader from the Federal prison at Leavenworth, Kansas, with a helicopter, the Federal Bureau of Investigation reported. Warrants were issued for six others in the alleged plot to free the leader, Oscar Lopez, 43 years old. Mr. Lopez is serving 55 years for seditious conspiracy and weapons offenses. Those arrested were identified as James Delgado, 33; Dora Garcia Lopez, 35, the leader’s sister-in-law, and Viola Salgado, 39. Each was charged with conspiracy to effect a prison escape and transport explosives in interstate commerce.
Former Miss America Vanessa Williams dropped a lawsuit against Penthouse magazine and two photographers after concluding that she had signed a model release for the nude pictures that later forced her to give up her crown in 1984, her mother said. “It was a really traumatic thing for our family, emotionally but primarily financially,” said Helen Williams. “It’s a complete vindication,” said an attorney for Penthouse and the photographers. Vanessa Williams, who reigned as the first black Miss America, has since landed jobs in off-Broadway productions.
A special three-judge federal court ruled that the Washington Post and New York Daily News cannot have access to federal grand jury testimony considered crucial to the prosecution of former Labor Secretary Raymond J. Donovan on fraud and larceny charges. Donovan, who quit his Cabinet post in March 1985, and nine other men and two companies have been charged with retaining $7.4 million earmarked for minority subcontractors in a New York City subway tunnel project in 1979. All have denied wrongdoing.
A family court judge who was a longtime power in the Rhode Island House was chosen to replace state Supreme Court Chief Justice Joseph A. Bevilacqua, who resigned to end an impeachment inquiry against him. Thomas F. Fay, 45, of Lincoln, one of six nominees, received a majority on the first ballot during a joint session of the General Assembly. Bevilacqua, 67, who had held the state’s top judicial post for 10 years, had been the target of a legislative investigation into his acknowledged ties to reputed mobsters, suspected adulterous affairs and alleged misuse of court employees and court contractors.
Local union presidents today began a two-week break from talks with the United States Steel Corporation, dashing company hopes of a new contract by Friday. But discussions are to continue between the company and national union leaders aimed at reaching an agreement for 45,000 members of the United Steelworkers of America. “We are continuing to negotiate,” James McGeehan, the union’s lead bargainer with the company, said after meeting with the presidents of 50 locals at the company’s plant.
A judge barred a pornography panel from publishing a list of retailers identified as distributors of pornography, saying the list was potentially unconstitutional. Judge John Garrett Penn issued a preliminary injunction on the panel, an Attorney General’s commission, marking a victory for Playboy magazine and other publications that sued the commission in the spring.
The differences between Blue Cross-Blue Shield health insurance plans and commercial health insurers may not be great enough to justify Blue Cross-Blue Shield’s tax-exempt status, the General Accounting Office has concluded. In a draft of a report to be released next week, the office, an investigative arm of Congress, said similarities between Blue Cross-Blue Shield and commercial health insurers diminished the justification for the tax-exempt status. The report said agency officials agreed with the Internal Revenue Service “that the Congress needs to decide whether the current exemptions are warranted.” $340 Million Tax Saving Congressional estimates put the tax saving for Blue Cross-Blue Shield at about $340 million a year.
Genes largely determine obesity, according to a new study of thousands of male twins. The study follows research among hundreds of adopted children that indicated their weight was determined much more by genetics than by eating habits.
Rudy Vallee, whose twangy crooning style, aided by a handheld megaphone, made him a singing idol of the 1930’s and 40’s, died last night at his home in North Hollywood, California. He was 84 years old. Mr. Vallee, whose most famous radio and stage theme songs were “My Time Is Your Time” and “The Whiffenpoof Song,” underwent surgery for throat cancer in March, and while in Cedars-Sinai Medical Center suffered a stroke that prolonged his hospital stay for several weeks. He apparently suffered a heart attack while watching the Statue of Liberty ceremonies on television, a spokesman for the North Hollywood police said.
Major League Baseball:
Four-time National League Cy Young award-winner Steve Carlton has agreed to terms to pitch with the San Francisco Giants, club president Al Rosen said tonight.
The Atlanta Braves defeated the Montreal Expos, 3–1. David Palmer scattered seven hits over eight and two-third innings and Ken Griffey hit a two-run single, lifting Atlanta over Montreal. Palmer (5–6) struck out nine and walked seven in earning his first career victory over his former teammates. Gene Garber got the last out for his ninth save. Atlanta took a 2–1 lead off the loser Joe Hesketh (6–5) in the fifth inning. With one out, Ken Oberkfell was hit by a pitch, stole second and went to third on a wild pitch by Hesketh. Glenn Hubbard and Palmer walked to load the bases and one out later Griffey hit a two-run single to right. Rafael Ramirez delivered an RBI single in the eighth for the Braves’ final run.
Jesse Barfield and Rance Mulliniks each hit two homers tonight in lifting the Toronto Blue Jays to an 8–3 victory over the Boston Red Sox. Barfield took the major league lead with his 20th and 21st homers, the 10th time he has hit more than one in a game during his career. Mulliniks drove in four runs with a single and his ninth and 10th homers, the first time he has hit more than one home run in a game in his career. The 10 homers equal his career high for an entire season. The Blue Jays, who snapped Roger Clemens’s 14-game winning streak Wednesday night, pounded Dennis (Oil Can) Boyd (10–6) for eight hits and five runs in less than five innings. The starter, John Cerutti (4–1), allowed seven hits and four walks, but only three runs in five and two-thirds innings, for the victory. He was bailed out of a jam in the sixth by Mark Eichhorn, who gave up two runs in the seventh. Tom Henke pitched the ninth for his 12th save.
The Los Angeles Dodgers beat the Pittsburgh Pirates, 6–3. Franklin Stubbs keyed a five-run first inning with a two-run double as Los Angeles ended a six-game losing streak. The five-run inning was the Dodgers’ most productive this season. Bob Welch (4–6) got the victory over Rick Reuschel (4–9).
The Minnesota Twins outslugged the Baltimore Orioles, 11–7. Ron Washington’s three-run homer, Kent Hrbek’s two-run homer and Steve Lombardozzi’s bases-empty shot powered Minnesota. Washington’s home run was an inside-the-park home run that capped Minnesota’s four-run sixth inning. He drove in four runs. The homer, a towering fly ball that caromed off the left field fence, gave Minnesota a 7–1 lead and knocked out the Baltimore starter Mike Boddicker (10–4) who has lost his last three starts. Bert Blyleven (7–7) scattered 11 hits over seven and two-thirds innings for his second straight victory. Frank Pastore gave up five runs in the ninth, then Keith Atherton finished. Hrbek hit his 18th homer in the seventh to make the score 9–1. Washington doubled home a run in the eighth, then scored on a throwing error by the third baseman, Tom O’Malley, making it 11–2.
With Dave Righetti making one of his strongest relief appearances of the season and the infield executing five double plays in consecutive innings, the New York Yankees clubbed the Detroit Tigers, 9–5, and left Piniella giddy. All too often recently, games have plunged the manager into a dejected mood. But tonight, the Yankees defeated the Tigers for the third game in four attempts this week. Playing before a crowd of 43,227, the Yankees exploded for four runs in the second inning, the first a Dan Pasqua home run, and a 6–2 lead, but the way the rest of the game went, they couldn’t be certain of victory until Righetti struck out Kirk Gibson for the final out.
Ray Knight had struck out the first four times he went to bat last night at Shea Stadium, and Darryl Strawberry had not hit a home run all season against a left-handed pitcher. But magic struck for both Knight and Strawberry at the end of the night the way it has often done for the Mets in a season that has seen them compile the best record in the major leagues. In the bottom of the 10th inning, after the Astros had struck for two runs, Strawberry tied the game with a two-run homer, his second of the night, and Knight followed one out later with a bases-empty homer for a 6–5 triumph over Houston. The victory was the seventh straight for the Mets.
The Phillies downed the Reds, 7–3. Mike Schmidt hit a three-run, first-inning homer to help the left-hander Bruce Ruffin gain his first major league victory before a home crowd of 61,475. The Phillies scored four times before the starter John Denny (5–8) could record an out. Making his second start since replacing Steve Carlton on the roster last week, Ruffin scattered seven hits through the first seven innings. Tom Hume came on to end an eighth-inning rally and picked up his third save. Gary Redus opened the Phillies’ first with a double to left-center and Juan Samuel walked before Ron Roenicke delivered an run-scoring single. Schmidt then hit a 1–0 pitch into the seats in left field for his 16th homer and a 4–0 lead. Cincinnati got a run back in the second when Eric Davis doubled to right-center, took third on a single by Bo Diaz and scored as Tony Perez grounded into a double play. Philadelphia made the score 5–1 in the fourth when Steve Jeltz singled, stole second and scored on a two-out single to right by Samuel.
The Cubs bowed to the Padres, 4–1. LaMarr Hoyt of San Diego allowed five hits, struck out seven and did not walk a batter in pitching his first complete game since last July 7. The victory was the first for Hoyt (3–4) since May 28. Dennis Eckersley (2–5) gave up two runs in seven innings on five hits and two walks. The deciding run scored on a two-out error in the fifth. Marvell Wynne doubled, then scored when the shortstop, Shawon Dunston, threw low to first in a grounder by Kevin McReynolds. Leon Durham blocked the ball but did not retrieve it and throw home in time to get Wynne.
Mike Krukow (10–4) tossed a four-hitter and Randy Kutcher hit a bases-empty home run in the sixth inning to lift the San Francisco Giants over the St. Louis Cardinals, 1–0. The triumph pushed the Giants into first place in the National League West by half a game over the Houston Astros, who lost to the Mets. After Krukow retired the first 10 Cardinals in order, Ozzie Smith singled with one out in the fourth and Lonnie Smith was safe on the second baseman Rob Thompson’s error, putting runners on first and second. Krukow, though, escaped the jam by retiring Clint Hurdle and Curt Ford on ground outs.
Montreal Expos 1, Atlanta Braves 3
Toronto Blue Jays 8, Boston Red Sox 5
Pittsburgh Pirates 3, Los Angeles Dodgers 6
Baltimore Orioles 7, Minnesota Twins 11
Detroit Tigers 5, New York Yankees 9
Houston Astros 5, New York Mets 6
Cincinnati Reds 3, Philadelphia Phillies 7
Chicago Cubs 1, San Diego Padres 4
St. Louis Cardinals 0, San Francisco Giants 1
Stock prices ended lower yesterday in slow pre-holiday trading as futures-related activity eroded the value of many stocks. The Dow Jones industrial average dropped 8.16 points, to 1,900.87, as declines outnumbered advances by 872 to 657. The market’s decline was broad-based. Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index dropped 0.91, to 251.79, while the New York Stock Exchange composite index slipped 0.48, to 144.67.
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 1900.87 (-8.16)
Born:
Tommy Hunter, MLB pitcher (Texas Rangers, Baltimore Orioles, Chicago Cubs, Cleveland Indians, Tampa Bay Rays, Philadelphia Phillies, New York Mets), in Indianapolis, Indiana.
Jerome Felton, NFL fullback (Pro Bowl, 2012; Detroit Lions, Carolina Panthers, Indianapolis Colts, Minnesota Vikings, Buffalo Bills), in Duren, North Rhine-Westphalia, West Germany.
Died:
Rudy Vallee, 84, American singer and one of the earliest crooners (“Vagabond Dreams”; “My Time Is Your Time”).