News Scrapbook 1989

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fu. 11a, T re os face Azusa in opener M d 9'5~} ;.iter became a forfeit victory Jackson and iumor quarterback emOty 01 0 Last year, the Cougars finished ~rendan farphy, the offense Ojl!d to l AIA-ranked 19th .n the au

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• fi Consumer groups' lawsmt challenges I • I exemptions for insurance companies l . 1 1 forced to take legal aetion because Sbortly after the suit was filed I By hchae mo ens 4 '7 the insurance commiSslooer bas re- here ln Supenor Court. the Depart- I .taff l\rlttr , I peatedly proven she is more interest- ment of Insurance requested a meet- SACRA. iE T? - oosume_r ed in protecting lnsurance company Ing ':"ith the consum~r ~htioo, ac- groups y terdaJ filed a laWSlllt profits than implementing the will of cording to the coaht1on s lead attor- aimed at blocking exemptions ~ant- the people,, said state Board of ney, James Wheaton of the Center ed by state Insurance ComID1SS1oner Equalizaton member Conway Collis. for Public Interest Law . Roxaru G11lesp1e to ,insurance co_m- a potential candidate for insurance Last month. Gillespie IJSted only 13 parues eeking to avoid Proposition commissioner insurers that may be subJect to roll- 103 s mandatory premi~ rollbacks. The SUit .,;as filed 00 behalf of backs After considerabl~ public _The suit, the first ma)Or _ legal _ac- Collis' Proposition 103 Intervention outcry, she added four maior rnsur- ho~ by consumers over the 1n1hahve, Team, the Los Angel chapter of the ers to the list on Wednesday. They claims Gillespie acted 1llegally by National As ociation for the Ad- include State Farm Mutual, Farm• establishing arbitrary standards that vancement of Colored People, the ers, Mercury and the the Automobile dete~e v;bether or not msurance Uruversity of San Diego's Center for Club of Southern California compa01es must roll back their Public Interest Law.' ind Voter Re- _Those firms co?trol about ooe- rates. . volt, which sponsored the initiative third of Cahfom1a s automobile m- . About 450. 1DSurance comparues Gillespie's Department of Insur- surance market. filed exempuo~ requestsed,an~ 4 las~ ance criticized the lawsuit in a state- Proposition 103, approved by vol- month G11lespie approv 1 .0 meot, adding that the department IS ers Jast November, calls for insur- them outnght, mostly for small m- •·fully committed" to enforcing the ance rate rollbacks to 20 percent suraoce com~n;es, led th t voter-approved initiative. below 1987 levels. However, the Cali- She tentative y ru _a more "Frivolous lawsuits such as this fornia Supreme Court significantly than 200 other insurers - mcludmg b ed the initiative's criteria for so_me of the state's largest - also one may generate headlines for pro- ~o~~!ck exemptions. will not face the rollbacks. ponents of Proposition 103 but will The initiative originally required The lawsuit ~sks the court to only prevent consumers from receiv- the rollbacks unless they would repeal_ t~ose achons and force the ing rate reductions in a timely man- threaten insurers with insolvency, comr~uss1oner to develop new e~- ner," the department said. d but that provision was ruled uncon- emphon standards through pu~ltc Although the initiative was passe stitutional. The court said rollbacks hearmgs - a process that ex1Sting in response to high automobile insur- could only be enforced if insurers J n f tate reg ance rates, Gillespie repeatedly has aw _genera y requires ors . said that most California drivers will were making more than a lair profit, ulahons. "f · t f t rn " "Unfortunately, we have been not see premium reductions. or air ra e O re u ·

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eted: By now The te\·e Garvey Saga sbou1d be yesterday's soap opera But those of us keepmg current with a 1989 Sports Facts calendar are renunded anew today. The entry for Sept. 8 - a painfully dated quote from sports columnist Jim 1urray: ' !r Clean· Steve Garvey IS the only ballplayer who, when the choir struck up 'Ave. 1ana,' could turn to hlS date and murmur, Listen, darhng, they're playmg our song. • Out our way: Atty. Philip Sharp, who leaves his law practice for the Superior Court bench next week, is gomg out a wmoer. Sharp postponed his swearing-In so he could keep a promJSe to represent colleague Robert Joel Brown m a personal inJury case. The jury came in for Sharp aod Brown this week.... With the Padres streaking, Tim Flannery may not abide by his decision to rel e on his birthday Sept. 29. But the Padres are going ahead with plans to honor the scrappy veteran Sept. 30. What had been billed as "F'an Appreciation Night," is now ''Flan Appreciation Night.' , Atty. Michael Liuzzi and Channel 39 anchorwoman Demse Yamada go to the altar tomorrow atJISD:,s. Founders Hall Chapel.Ralph Nicl!ols, fo1 met crooner with The Lettermen, will sing at the wedding. (Liuzzi and Yamada "discovered'' Nichols singing at a Catholic Church in Beverly Hills.) inside out: Al Gray, the Marine Corps commandant, was on hand yesterday for a breakfast introducing MCRD's new commanding general, John S. Grinalds. And both men alluded to recent talk of expanding Lindbergh Field onto MCRD property. "The depot is not an island in a sea of indifference," said Grinalds, pledging to play a role in the community and keep San Diegans aware of what goes on there. Any discussions on the airport issue would be on top of the table, he said Referring to a "tug-of-war" between the city and the Marines, Gray seemed to dampen any hopes of airport expansionists. "We can't be as good as the nation expects us to be without our facilities m San Diego," Gray said. Moving right along: Nancy (MacHutchin) Chase and her husband, Richard, were pleased to read here about the premium on re- sales of the hot new two-seat Mazda Miata. They bought theirs two days before they discovered she was pregnant with twins (boy and girl). The Chase family will be in the market for a four-seater come January.... Sheriff John Duffy is off on an extended holiday in Europe this month. But not to worry; he's still keeping tabs on the department, his staff says. He's phoning in daily for messages. Which leads taxpayer Rushelle Butler to a new worry: "What if he's calling collect?" ... Construction work on the Laurel Street Bridge is playing havoc with traffic in Balboa Park. Five minutes before curtain for ''Breaking Legs" Wednesday night, the Old Globe box office took a call from a frantic patron on his car phone. The Laurel I Street Bridge was closed, he cried. "Hold the curtain!" 1

IS a team Fogarty has yet to beat m six tries, although ooe of those losses

San Diego , CA. (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089 I (Cir. S. 341,840) SEP-9 - 198

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Qlebrat Friendship Sunday at the 9 ad 11 a.m. services tomorrow at 123 ~mino e la Reina, Mission Valley. A 8 p.m Wednesday the church will Stow a video of Bernie Siegel, author ci "Love,; Medicine and Miracles." • The San Diego Society for hlman.iltic Judaism will present a t1lk by Toby Dorfman on the history d ancie1t Jewish festivals at 7 p.m. ltiday U\ the Presidio Room of Fab- iious lnlls, Hotel Circle. • Sovi!t Jewish pianist Alyosha Ryabinoi will present a concert at 7:30 p.m next Saturday at Kehilat Israel lessianic Congregation at 4633 Dolva Drive in Clairemont. Ad- mission free. • HolJ Angels Byzantine Catholic church JI hold its annual bazaar next w~ end on the church grounds at 2235 ,alahad Road. The program will run from noon to 7 p.m. next Saturda and Sept. 17 and include an EasternEuropean dinner. • Mo ignor John Sammon will discuss 'Why Vatican m•· at noon Wednescay for the Serra Club of San Diego a the Padre Trails Inn. Sam- mon is llicar for pastoral and com- munity i[fairs for the Roman Catho- lic Dioc1Se of Orange. • He1K Roodt, a consul for the Re- public a\ South Africa, will discuss the state of his country and his expe- riences 1here at 7:30 p.m. Friday at First Urrtarian Church. The event is sponsorel by the Humanist Fellow- ship of San Diego. • Kolltl of San Diego, a Jewish ed- ucational institution, will offer free classes !tr men and women at 4825 College Ave., most from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Rall>i Aharon Levine will lec- ture on the Book of Nechemia on Sundays.~nd on the Talmudic Trai:- tate Ked bin oo Mondays. Rabbi vid Heber will teach the laws of hrut at 7:30 p.m. and Tal- mudic iminal Jaw at 8:45 p.m. Tuesday abbi Daniel Korobkin will teach o the weekly portion of the Bible at :30 p.m. and Rabbi Heber on Talll]lldic criminal law at 8:45

hers and former affiliates are invited to attend the gala event. For infor- mation call Peg Hilliard at 452-9479. • Ashley Walker Hooper, diroctor of Special Services of the YWCA, will discuss battered women after the 10 a.m. service tomorrow at University Lutheran Church on La Jolla Shores Drive. • China, its people, palaces, pago- das and pandas, will be the subject at Kensington Community Church at 6 p.m. tomorrow. The presentation will include pictures taken in Tiananmen Square a few days before the govern- ment crackdown on June 3 and scenes of demonstrations that para- lyzed Shanghai on June 4. The Rev. George Barber and his wife were on an eight-city tour of China when the history-making events occurred. • An open house for the deaf or hearing-impaired will be held from 6:30 to 9 p.m. Monday at the Mormon Battalion Visitors Center in Old Town, 2510 Juan St. A multi-media historical presentation will be of- fered. For information call Ron Kni- erim at 280-8724 TDD/V. • Organist Robert Thompson will play the dedicatory recital of a 10- rank Martin Ott pipe organ in Found- er's ChaP,!;1 at USO at 8 p.m. Friday. Thompson is director of music at All Souls Episcopal Church. • Don Kerne is the new choirmas- ter and Gordon Baker the new organ- ist at St. Luke's Ep1Scopal Church on 30th St. Kerne has served as dire<:tor of music at several churches, was the founder of Pacific Lyric Theater and worked with the San Diego Opera Co. Baker bas had 40 years experience as organist in various parishes and was co-founder, music director and head- master of St. Gregory's Choir Day School in Chicago. • Christ Church Unity will observe Friend Day at the 10 a.m. service tomorrow as part of the centennial of Unity worldwide. Youth programs at the church are available at nursery through high school levels. • The Church of Today Unity will

Religion News ... in brief behalf of the Kelmaos may contact the synagogues for information. • The Fifth Annual AIDS Vigil of Prayer will be held today and tomor- row at the Metropolitan Community Church of San Diego. The Rev. David Farrell, pastor of the church, will lead a service at noon with guest clergy from many denominations. An AIDS vigil Mass will be offered at 7 p.m. The church will be open for prayer for 24 hours, with refreshments and counselors avs,lable. Farrell will preach at the closing service tomorrow. For more information call 280-4333. • Sharp Hospitals will present a talk "When Helping ls No Help," at the Dr./Clergy Luncheon Seminar at noon Wednesday at Sharp Memorial Hospital Auditorium. The speaker, Dr. Gary Easton, is the medical di- rector of the Family Center for Alco- hol and Drug Treatment at Sharp Ca- brillo Hospital. Call 541-3022 for in- formation. • The San Diego County Ecumeni- cal Conference's Faith, Order and Witness Committee will present a se- ries of lectures on attitudes toward world religions based on the book, "No Other Name'" by Paul F. Knitter. The le<:tures will be held on the first Monday of the month beginning Oct. 9. A meeting a~ 10 a.m. Monday will pursue the question, "What is ap- propriate Christian Witness'" - in response to a Jewth-Christian dia- logue held las't spring. The meetings are held in the Guild Room at the Cathedral Church of St. Paul. For further information call the confer- enl'e at 296-4557. • The Congrega;ional Church of La Jolla will celebrate its 100th anni- versary with a Victorian dinner and dance at 6 p.m. Sept. 23 in Forshaw Hall at the churd. Friends, mem-

p.m. Thursdays. For more informa- tion call 582-9366. • Ken Ham, host of the film "The Genesis Solution'' will speak at the 6 p.m. service tomorrow at Covenant Presbyterian Church, 30th and How- ard Street. South A fifth anniversary celebration for the St. James Plaza, the first federal- ly funded senior citizen and handi- capped housing in Imperial Beach, at 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. today. The 100-uoit complex at 1052 9th St., Imperial Beach, is sponsored by St. James Lu- theran Church. An open house, re- freshments and entertainment will be featured. East A program on growing through loss will be presented from 7 to 9 p.m. weekly through Oct. 16 begin- ning Monday at Foothills United Methodist Church in La Mesa. Edith Parker and Joan Wolfe will lead a small-group experience. Tbe cost is $15 for materials and refreshments. • The Rev. Kenneth Roberts will present a weekend seminar "Playboy to Priest," Sept. 29 to Oct. I at Whispering Winds Campground in Julian. Roberts served as a British Airways chief steward, language in- terpreter and as an intelligence offi- cer for the British army before en- tering the priesthood. For reserva- tions, call Marge O'Neill at 282-0339. • Dedication of a new Friendship Hall and multi-purpose building will be held following the 10 a.m. home- coming service tomorrow at the

United Church of Cr~ JI La Mesa. • Christian Community Theater will present Neil Simon's comedy, "Barefoot in the Park,'' at the First United Methodist Church in La Mesa. Show times are 8 p.m. Sept. 21, 22, 23, 28 and 29, and at 2 p.m. Sept. 30 and Oct. 1. For more information call 588-0206. • The Bethel Bible Series, a two- year, college-level overview, will be offered at Alpine First Baptist Church of the Willows at 7 p.m. Wednesdays and 9:15 a.m. Sundays beginning next week. For informa- tion call the Rev. Robert Pratt at 560-1463. North Temple Adat Shalom will welcome Soviet Jews into the San Diego com- munity at the 8 p.m. service Friday. Vicktor Kogan and his family, recent immigrants living in San Diego, will relate their experiences in the Soviet Union, in refugee camps in Italy and here. Howard Brotman. chairman of the Passage to Freedom Program. also will speak. • Women's Christian Fellowship will begin its 10th year of Bible study at 9:30 a.m. Thursday at St. Elizabeth Seton Church in Carlsbad. Angie Lake will lead a study of the Gospel of John. • Philip Crouch. vice president and program director of Trinity Broadcasting Network of Santa Ana, will speak at the 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. services at Trinity Christian Center San Marcos. 855 Barham Drive.

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San Diego, Friday,~. 1989 E- 5 NBC CBS in pregame battle , 1- ;;z t f Wh t' come competitive; I don't know yet. N EW YO -:- 1 a s new on So far, it's so much talk. Sunday morru,ng . . "Terry (O'Neil) is a talented guy, At NBC, 11 s a new studio and he was one of the contributors to set, a new ca.st of characters and a CBS' success. But you need more new emphasis on bard news for than one guy CBS still has great "NF~ Live," the network's Sunday de th. I don't know about NBC." mormng wrap-around show. g,Neil made his initial mark in Bob Costas still rules the roost as rts TV as exe<:utive producer of host, w!th new co-host 0~. Simpson Sports for three years (1981-84), at bis side. Ind~, Costas 1s the only before a personality clash with Mus- constant remammg from a season burger and other higher-ups caused ago. , him to quit. By contrast, CBS pre~ame show O'Neil was hired last May to a "NFL Today" returns virtually un- similar role at NBC Sports, after Ml- changed. , . chael Weisman was dismissed. B,~enl Musburger s e~e~!~d s~yle Shaker emphasized that "_NFL - You are lookin_g_ /Jve. might Today" _ a perennial ratmgs wmner grate on some critics, but he has when measured against "NFL Live" 1HESTRIBUNE

Area synagogues are participating in a national letter-writing campaign on behalf of the Boris Kelman fami- ly. who wish to emigrate from Lenin- grad in the Soviet Union. The week of Sept. 6-13 has been named "Kelman Rescue Week" by the Union of Coun- cils for . viet Jews, a grass-roots movement working to help Soviet Jews emigrate. Congregations sponsoring the let- ter writing to Soviet Ambassador Yuri Dubi in include the San Diego congregaticn, of Chabad, Beth E:, Ti- fereth Israr and Emanu-El, whose spiritual le, er, Rabbi Martin Law- son, has visited the Kelmans in Len- ingrad. Boris Kel!Jlan, his wife, Alla, and their sons, llaim and Maxim, have been refused permission to emigrate because Boris allegedly had access to secrets wlen be worked as a struc- tural design gineer 10 years ago. Physicians are being mobilized to write letters f behalf of Alla, who is a pediatrician, ll.S. Rep. Bill Lowery, R-San Diego, has written a strongly worded letter on bel)alf of the Kelmans to Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, saying that refusing Kelman exit on the groundi of state secrecy "contra- dicts you publicly stated opinion that such refusals should last no longer than 10 years." Other congres. men, including Rep. Jim Bates, D-Calif., also have writ- ten letters on the Kelmaos· behalf. Bates said the refusal to allow the Kelmans to emigrate ''is not consist- ent" with the policy of openness the Soviet government is trying to pro- mote. The Kelmans most recently were refused exit in July. Meanwhile, Kelman has been guid- ing the revival of Jewish culture in Leningrad, where 150,000 Jews live. He also was instrumental in gaining official recognition of a Jewish cul- tural society in Leningrad. Anyone interested in writing on

(perhaps a reflection of the NFC's bigger markets) - 1s not remammg status quo. "In this business, which is so com- petitive, there is no such thing as sta- tus quo," said Shaker. "You either strive to be better or you fall back. You always try to be better. But that doesn't mean chang- ing your (on-air) people. We're happy with our crew." The two NFL-themed sho s that FSPN airs on Sundays - "Game Day" and "Prime Time" - have im- pressed Shaker, and made him a bit envious. "They have the luxury o more time, two hours every wee~ (com- pared to a half-hour at N C and CBS). You can cover a lo more ground that way," he said. CBS intends to provide reports that will be similar - in being as topical and timely as possib e - to those done by FSPN. "You'll see more reporq; from league cities on what's happening right now, not last week" said Shaker. On the touchy issue of airihg odds for weekly NFL games, Shaker re- mains firmly on the side of purity. No gambling odds will be aired on CBS. Why not? . . "All this overemphasis on betting has become a cliche," said Shaker. "I get kind of tired of it _mysel!, If peo- ple want to find that kind of 1nform~- tion they know where to go. It won t be ~s. We don't have to be like every- body else." Fact is, NBC won't air ?dds on NFL games. Only ESPN - with Pele Axthelm giving his light-hearted picks - plans to be so blatant, or honest, about the issue of gambling. However, with the advent of NFL sports lotteries in Oregon and New Hampshire and eventually other states CBS could change its policy. "I guess if we went into the toilet (in the ratings), we'd have to look at what's happening and why," said Shaker. "But we intend to stay on top. Maybe this is the year it won't hap- pen. You never take anything for granted." • • • SPINNING THE DIAL - ESPN celebrated its loth anniversary last night with a 90-minute special, host- ed by Chris Berman. . Last niitht at the burgeoning net-

TED SHAKER CBS Sports' exe<:utlve producer

work's headquarters in Bristol, Conn., the occasion was marked by a party. Huey Lewis & The News entertained FSPN's 500 staffers, ad- vertisers and others at a nearby amusement park. • CBS' coverage of the U.S. Open resumes tomorrow (Chi. 8, 8 a.m.) and Sunday (1 p.m.). As usual, Mary Carillo enlivens the telecasts - which are hosted by the rather staid Pat Summerall and Tony Trabert - with her savvy, sassy remarks. • CBS has carried the U.S. Open for the past 22 years, expanding its coverage each year. Back in 1968, when CBS began its coverage, six hours of action were aired. This year, it's up to 33 hours. And don't forget that USA Net- work before this weekend, aired 80 hou~ of U.S. Open action the past two weeks. • In a surprise move, KMPC Radio of Los Angeles has hired Paul Olden to call its UCLA football and basket- ball package. Olden had been doing Cleveland Indians play-by-play, and before that Las Vegas Stars baseball. He's also the fellow who, as an aide to the wonderfully acerbic Jim Healy on KMPC, asked Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda about "Dave Kingman's performance," when Kingman's three homers bur- ied the Dodgers some 10 years a~O- Lasorda's X-rated response 1s a regular feature of Healy's .nightly show even now. If you've ever listened ,to He~ly, you know which Lasorda Im talkmg about. XTRA Radio's Lee Hamilton had been a leading candidate for the UCLA job. • Joe Stein The Tribune's TV- • Radio columni;t, will no longer kib- itz with Jim Laslavic before Charg- ers games on XTRA. No replacement has been named as yet. Memo to XTRA: Give that job to Brad Cesmat. He's young, bright and aggressive, and he and Laz would make a strong team. • USO and USIU both have reachedagreement with Vista-based KVSD to air their basketball games. No announcers have been named.

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proven bis staying power and star power over 15 years as the anchor. Analyst Dick Butkus returns for his second season - his rough edges smoothed slightly from working with Musburger. And, of course, there's al- ways Irv Cross, whose bland style adds little to the show. But Jet's be grateful. At least Jimmy "The Greek" and Phyllis George are nowhere to be found these days at CBS. The changes we'll see Sundays on CBS' "NFL Today" are far more sub- tle than those at "NFL Live." But there will be changes, insists CBS Sports exe<:utive producer Ted Shaker. "The old 'happy talk' format of the past just doesn't work anymore," said Shaker, who has been in charge of "NFL Today" for 10 years. "That's why we hired a guy like Will McDonough (of the Boston Globe), who is as highly regarded an NFL reporter as there is in the ne~s- paper business. We work on stones up to the moment we go on the air. Some eight to 10 years ago, we could program our show on a Monday and not change much." These days, with so many te<:hno- logical advances that provide viewers with stories instantly, a menu of only pre-packaged stories loses its appeal. "The sports TV industry changed so much in the '80s," said Shaker, who has changed himself in the past year, shaving bis beard and losing about 70 unwanted pounds. "Once, 'NFL Today' was a show unlike any other network show that covered a league," he said. "Now, it's , commonplace to see this kind of show, even on local stations. Every- body's doing it. That makes it more important than ever to be topical, as immediate as possible." Shaker, 37, points to ESPN - not NBC, its traditional network rival - as a vital force in that shift. "The strongest push to change our show comes from ESPN," said Shaker. "NBC could very well be-

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0 1EGO " ~ the Uni· I SAN athlet~~~n its 1989 I county I Sa!\ Diego 0 Ph ,oreros 1 vers1ty O when t e • sat· football seas;~cifiC Unive':1'fuiand I host Azusa.ht at 7:30, 1'h •ve 1me· I urday !llgt includes defettvalhalla 1 contm~enwashaJTI out °ch f1e\der 1 ma!\ Jimde receiver 'La offensive l{igh, Vil smont conege, a trorr frOTll Gro 5 ene Fontan \iJleman G . _ and defensive Grossmont High t of Grossmont ck GerrY Dorn ou es except ~a h Al\ are sophomo~akeside's "y·1gld.er who is.a 1u111~r.r offensive 1e , . a sen10 A Mark Garcia, ed at St. u· lineman who prepping starter for gustine, is a re~;' finished 5-4 a th e Toreros. U_ • ~usa pacific, 0 wh1\e = as 7-l year ag • 16 starters. w which~rns _J:--- i~ (~~cd~),____

"Charly'' SetJ~ii Actor Cliff Robertson, campus at d i·n the film. will host the ~~t{f~~s:~~!~Wi!::t~:r f~~: Tickets are _$100 Fea~h,!ore information, ·tal will have a black-tie 16 at the Hotel del ani:a!eJ~onsidine is ~hair~om- . er that begms with 7 an of th:tful~d;~~~er is at 8. Tickets are p.m. cocb a}o~ more information, phone Coronado Hospi dinner £ Corona o. who starre t:i~: t' begtns at ferred seating. phone 299-0100. o .

T HOSPITAL Foun· G !~!~l\!?irbenefit from its "C!tlC~ C I y" party tomorrow oun r nso House tours, auc- ranch near_ Desca . ·ner are part of the lions, dan~10g an~/: 4 p.m. Tickets are party' which sta information, phone $ 75 each. For more 698-5~74. . of San Diego Auxiliary will Un1vers1ty t t ~rom 1 to 3 p.m. have a members~, p e Mission Hills resi- Tuesday in a pn~a~~rmation, phone 442- dence. For more m 9 907 or 284-0551. . I plans a luneh at Caridad Internac1t~~e Bali Hai on Sbel- 11 a.m. WdednF~:~o~e information, phone ter lslan . 222-8717. ty Special Olympics will San Diego Coun

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(John Freeman's TV-Radio Sports column appears every Friday in The Tribune.) "

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