ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: WEDNESDAY, October 20, 1993                   TAG: 9310200015
SECTION: EXTRA                    PAGE: 9   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: 
DATELINE:                                 LENGTH: Medium


PEOPLE

Entertainment Weekly is painting by numbers again - we're talking salaries, box-office grosses, Nielsen ratings, best-seller lists, etc. - for its fourth annual look at show-biz power players. This year's Power 101 list is dominated by behind-the-scenes types - executives like the guy in the No. 1 spot, Tele-Communications Inc. President John Malone, the cable titan behind the proposed megamerger with Bell Atlantic.

Your big-name celebrity types rank this way: Steven Spielberg (13); Oprah Winfrey (17); Tom Cruise (18); Kevin Costner (20); David Letterman (28, didn't even make the cut last year); Clint Eastwood (32); Mel Gibson (33); Julia Roberts (35); Arnold Schwarzenegger (36, down from 19 in the flames of "Last Action Hero"); Garth Brooks (39); Barbra Streisand (40); John Grisham (43); Michael Crichton (46); Harrison Ford (49); Jodie Foster (53); Whoopi Goldberg (55); Michelle Pfeiffer (56); Robert Redford (57); Michael Douglas (59); Demi Moore (60); Spike Lee (63); Denzel Washington (65); Stephen King (66); Roseanne Arnold (67); Whitney Houston (71); Rush Limbaugh (72); Tom Hanks (73); Al Pacino (75); Sharon Stone (78); Jerry Seinfeld (81); Michael Jordan (84); Sylvester Stallone (85); Robin Williams (87); Janet Jackson (88); Tim Allen (90); Martin Scorsese (91); Garry Shandling (93) and Katie Couric (101). Not real but on the list: "Beavis and "Butt-head" (76) and Barney (101.5). Missing persons: Madonna, Michael Jackson and Prince, the former.

Ivana Trump's looking out for her own.

She says she wants to make sure her three children by ex-husband, Donald, don't feel threatened by the birth of a half-sister.

"I sat them down and I told them there will be nothing changing in their lives," Trump said in an interview on the nationally syndicated "Geraldo" program.

"They will have their father, and he will love them the same. And we have to just explain to them because they might feel threatened by a new baby," Trump said.

The Trumps were divorced in 1992 after several years of publicity about Donald Trump's affair with Marla Maples. Last week Maples gave birth to a little girl, Tiffany Trump.

Ivana Trump also says in the interview, to be broadcast Friday, that she and Donald stay in touch, but only for the sake of the children.

The Trump children, Donald Jr., Ivancka and Eric, range in age from 9 to 15.



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