Idaho bound
Charlton Heston and wife Lydia will perform "Love Letters" during a trip to Idaho. The couple will perform the two-person play June 24 at Pocatello's Colonial Theater, the day after Heston takes his well-known conservative views before the Republican State Convention.
Three Tenors sing on Las Vegas Strip
In a venue associated more with boxing matches and rock concerts, tenors Luciano Pavarotti, Jose Carreras and Placido Domingo performed for a sellout crowd.
The Three Tenors returned Saturday night for four encores before a crowd of 11,000 at Mandalay Bay Resort on the Las Vegas Strip.
They sang selections from "Le Cid" and "Tosca" and performed "Maria," "Tonight" and "Moon River" with the 84-piece Glendale Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Marco Armiliato.
The show will be the only West Coast concert this year for the Three Tenors. Tickets cost $95 to $900.
Chase gets golf tips -- from president
Does President Clinton have a future as a golf instructor?
"Your president is a very good golfer," Chevy Chase told reporters after playing nine holes with Clinton on Sunday in Thurmont, Md.
The former "Saturday Night Live" comic said he has learned more about golf from Clinton than from anyone else.
"The whole time he's talking and telling everybody how to swing, and he's happy," said Chase, who played with Clinton and his half brother, Roger Clinton.
Does Clinton ever cut corners on the course?
"No, he's not that type," Chase said.
Ex-TV lawyer named to state bar board
Julie Sommars, who never won a trial as prosecutor Julie March on "Matlock," has a real-life role overseeing California's lawyers.
Sommars was appointed April 7 to a nonlawyer position on the State Bar Board of Governors, which runs the bar's admission and discipline programs and supervises programs in legal education, ethics and aid to the poor.
The actress was named by state Senate President Pro Tem John Burton, who last year appointed her to the state Commission on Judicial Performance, the disciplinary board for judges. She leaves that panel to join the bar board.
"In her role as Julie March, she's probably tried more lawsuits than anyone on the bar board," said bar president Andrew Guilford. He said Sommars "has a great interest in lawyers and the law, and she will be providing exactly the type of input lay members on the Board of Governors should be providing."