52S P E C I A L F E AT U R E S Misspellings and unusualcharacters sometimes occur duringclosed caption transmissions, especial-ly those of live events. There may be asmall delay before captions appearwhen you change channels. These arenot malfunctions of the TV.3Press the œœ or √√ buttonto turn closed captioningon/off. In caption mode, captionsappear at the bottom of the screen,and they usually cover only a smallportion of the picture.In text mode, information unrelatedto the program, such as news orweather, is displayed. Text oftencovers a large portion of the screen.4Press the button toselect “Mode”.Press the œœ or √√ buttonto select “Caption” or“Text”.Viewing Closed CaptionsYour TV decodes and displays the closed captions that are broadcast with certain TV shows.These captions are usually subtitles for the hearing impaired or foreign-language trans-lations. All VCRs record the closed caption signal from television programs, so home-record-ed video tapes also provide closed captions. Most pre-recorded commercial video tapes pro-vide closed captions as well. Check for the closed caption symbol in your television scheduleand on the tape’s packaging: .1Press the MENU button todisplay the menu.Press the button threetimes to select the“Function” menu.Press the √√ button.2Press the button twiceto select the “Caption”menu, then press the √√button.5Depending on the particular broadcast, it might be necessary tomake changes to “Channels” and “Field”:Use the , , œœ and √√ buttons to make the changes. (Followthe same procedure as in steps 3~4 above.)Press the MENU button three times to exit.Different channels and fieldsdisplay different information: Field 2carries additional information thatsupplements the information inField 1. (For example, Channel 1may have subtitles in English, whileChannel 2 has subtitles in Spanish.)