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Jul 31 2004

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Looking Back 1984 Olympics Day 4 In L.A.; Plenty Of Stars For Stars And Stripes

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Los Angeles Times

July 31, 2004 Saturday 
Home Edition

BYLINE: Bill Dwyre

SECTION: SPORTS; Sports Desk; Part D; Pg. 5

LENGTH: 478 words

The American Olympic happy days continued, and Richie Cunningham and the Fonz undoubtedly were around to cheer.

ABC suffocated its viewers with celebrating American athletes, and the TV viewers seemed to love it. The Times, reacting to a late-breaking event of some magnitude, headlined the victory by the U.S. men’s gymnastics team “The Miracle of L.A.”

The team, with Mitch Gaylord seeking additional points by risking his signa-ture move, the Gaylord III, and hitting it, not only won gold for the first time in men’s gymnastics, but got an Olympic men’s gymnastics medal for the first time in 52 years.

Richard Hoffer, now of Sports Illustrated, waxed eloquent on deadline: “They had flown, flared, floated … would they ever come down?”

The next day, critics speculated that, had the Soviet-bloc countries com-peted, the Americans never would have won the gold. It was pointed out, however, that China, which had finished second, had beaten the Soviets along the way.

Life was just as red, white and blue at the swim venue at USC. Five finals were held, and five Americans won.

Rowdy Gaines, one who had been victimized by Jimmy Carter’s boycott of the Moscow Olympics, took the 100 freestyle, his time of 49.80 seconds beating the Olympic record of 49.99 set by Jim Montgomery in the ‘76 Games. Theresa Andrews took the 100 backstroke, then marched over and presented her gold medal to her 20-year-old brother, two years younger than she. He had been paralyzed after a bike accident and she had taken a year off from swimming to help with his care.

The demonstration sport of baseball was contributing greatly to the L.A. com-mittee’s bottom line, drawing 52,319 at Dodger Stadium to watch the U.S. team beat Taiwan, 2-1.

The rowing venue at Lake Casitas was having so much trouble with midday wind that some of its events were started at 7:30 a.m.

Vonnie Gros, the U.S. women’s field hockey coach, was pleasantly surprised by the lack of smog. She had trained her team in Pennsylvania, and to get ready for Southern California, had asked officials at Ursinus College to back up four cars to the door of the gym and turn on their engines. Ursinus officials had refused.

News leaked out that Lord Killanin, president of the International Olympic Committee until 1980, and the man who had threatened to take the Games from Los Angeles because of lack of public funding until Mayor Tom Bradley called his bluff, had been rescued by an LAPD officer named Bill Pavelic. Killanin, choking on food at an L.A. restaurant, was saved when Pavelic pounded on his back five or six times. Several unidentified members of the LAOOC said they wished they had been there to help.

Sen. Bill Bradley, the former basketball star, was quoted as saying that Ath-ens should be made the permanent home of the Olympics. Twenty years to the day later, the Greeks were finishing the main Olympic Stadium.

LOAD-DATE: July 31, 2004

LANGUAGE: ENGLISH

GRAPHIC: PHOTO: (no caption) 

PUBLICATION-TYPE: Newspaper

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May 27 1996

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SLEUTHS SET TO TRY ANY LEADS O.J. HAS

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Daily News (New York)

May 27, 1996, Monday

BYLINE: By JERE HESTER

SECTION: News; Pg.  7

LENGTH: 399 words 
A team of sleuths from the land of Sam Spade has offered to probe the slay-ings of O.J. Simpson’s ex-wife and her pal for free but said yesterday they’ll need the athlete’s full cooperation.

The crack crew of six, led by legendary private eye Hal Lipset, was spurred by Simpson’s recent comments that there were leads in San Francisco the football great’s hometown but that he couldn’t afford to follow them up.

“We want to get to the bottom of it,” Joel Michel, a San Francisco investiga-tor and a vice president of the World Association of Detectives, told the Daily News.

“We’re not here to judge anyone, just to seek the truth,” he said, adding that the detectives were willing to forgo their usual $ 100-per-hour fees.

The gumshoes hatched the idea over lunch recently with the renowned Lipset a former Watergate investigator famed for designing a bug that looked like a mar-tini olive.

“We’ve talked about it, and we feel very good about what our offer is,” Sam Webster, WAD executive director, told The News. “We don’t think anyone has ever done this.”

Lipset, who turns 77 today, told the San Franciso Examiner, “If there are leads in San Francisco that somebody is not looking into, then I think they should be.

“We’re serious,” he added. “But if I find something, I want the right to tell the public and the San Francisco district attorney.”

Bill Pavelic, a former LAPD detective who worked for Simpson, 48, during his successful defense of double-murder charges, told The Examiner he welcomed the offer and would discuss it with the gridiron star.

He confirmed there were investigative leads in San Francisco, but declined to offer details.

Simpson is going to have to come clean with the San Francisco supersnoops if they are to determine whether the leads in the June 12, 1994, murders are real or just stuff that dreams are made of.

“We can’t get started until he gives us something to go on,” said Michel. “But so far, we haven’t heard diddly from him.”

The football star was widely mocked for his vow to devote his life to hunting down the “real” killer following his Oct. 3 acquittal in the slayings of Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ron Goldman.

During his publicity tour of England earlier this month, he cryptically re-ferred to the San Francisco leads in a speech at Oxford University, where he complained he was virtually broke.

LOAD-DATE: May 27, 1996

LANGUAGE: ENGLISH

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