Je e Ferguson, right, trying to protect himself from Riddick Bow ' right Saturday night.
u ch eynold can
eep running, for now
!Iv NESHA STA C!V1C
b.oc,.,.d Pre •• Writ.r
TIJTIGART, GERMANY (AP
Butch Reynold can keep runnin ,
for now. There will be no runnin f r
Katrin Krabbe and John Ngugi for a
long time, if the IAAF gets its way.
The International Amateur Ath
letic Federation on Monday ruled
Krabbe, world champion over 100
and 200 meters from Germany, and
Ngugi, five-time world crOSS country
champion from Kenya, should re
main banned. That effectively burl
their hopes of competing at the world
championship in Stuttgart on Au .
14-22.
Both case are related to dru VIO
lations.
As for Reynold, the 4 -rneter
world record holder. the lAAF un
ci! made no immediate ruling.
THE MER! printer i in-
volved ina Ie al battle with th
world body over previous drug ban.
The lAAF wants Reynol . to
drop hi legal a tion against the ov
erning body. Reynold w award d
S27.3 million 10 d ma e against the
IAAF by a U.S. jud . The lAM
rejects the j uri diction of the .S.
court and refus to recogniz the
judgment or pay Reynold. any
money..
Reynold .. wh h insi t d h
was inn cnt, h' erved out hi b n
of more than two ye IS for aile edly
taking teroid .
The body h' threatened to
pend Rey nold agai n or u him r
libel unle he drop hi legal a non
and apologizes or dero at ry com
ments about the f derati n.
Reynold h refused to do
ED for
four y a aft r t ting po ltive for
the drug clen utcrol, banned by the
IAAF. Th German federation then
cut th ban to ne year, on a legal
technicality, although Krabbe had
admitted taking the drug.
The ban w reduced b ause of
a leg I 10 phole: the German federa
tion h d no provi ion for out-of
c mpetition drug te ting at the time
Krab e w te ted.
Krab e had a previous drug ban
I i ted I t year because of the same
loophol .
The printer, peaking in her
hometown of eubrandenburg, said
he w considering legal action to
ight th IAAF ruling.
The lAAF aid Its Ie al c. ports
would further tudy the complex
b ore deciding \ h thcr to take
. it to arbitration. Th m ruhng ap-
plied to Grit Breu r nd Manuela
Derr, two other German . pn nte
who al t ted p itive tor cl n-
buterol.
If both Krabbe' and
case went to arbitration. IAAF
OUi� aid the g vernin bOG' of
the sport v. ould not make a d � I. ion
before the world Champlo�'hip .
"They have no chance of om
peting at the worlds," aid on IAAF
source, who requ ted anonymity.
Continued from A4
hired any n to fill the jobs 1 had
been promoted from. So, I was still
d in tho e JO wi th no extra pay
and n extra hlp," Mathi alledges
repeatedly � ked or a cl rk or ecre
tary t aid her in her re ponsibilities,
ut h ay derued.
C lhns was then fired for alleged
ab nteeu m, al th u h ill. ab ence
w due to an illncs . Mathi pecu
lau ns are that Fath r Cunningham
was not happy With th way Collins
w runrung the Center and although
no help w -given, Collins was re-
ponsi Ie for the compliance i s
And Mathi was put on probation.
"IW TO DlIlATlallowed
th nter to e in non ompliance.
Eleanor Jo aitis, executive vice
president and iate dir tor, told
me that I knew better ince I trained
Richard. They told me that I would
no Ion er i tant manager and
continued from AS
))1, TlU �T lL official
in the community ay that though
tm. 1. not en ugh money for them to
handle all th thing they hould be
doing, but it would allow th m to
.ontinuc operation and urvive.
B f re th exira fund wer
und om i ty uncil members
ted the money bould not be
drvided equally but more hould be
iven to the di trict council they
cvaluat d "g od" or "effective.
orne D' tri t unci! taff m m-
aid that uch a plan would leave
e dis tri t council with less
m 11'-) \Jlldble to urvivc and leave
the ItJZCns of th ir are without rep
re ntau n.
that I could stay and i t Mary Sul
livan, who came back from r tire
ment," Mathis said.
Mathis was outrag d. AJthough it
was COIIlllJ\)n knowledge that Mathi
bad no desire to bold tbe pr ram
director job
"I was blamed for S •
paid back tuition, am n
thing. I said, 'The only re
this is happening i be a
BI k, '" Mathi aid.
amu Is c uld
not comm nt on th updat ttl pre
time.
Matlll stated that al th ugh th r
Cunningh m i a pn t, he still d
parents untruths at an Apn121 meet
ing by aymg that h quit beau e
could not have the program direc-
tor job and also ayin tha 11 enter
would clo e.
By BILL KOLE
TIl � UI Dambr t'
April 12 di mi al vi lated hi con
ti tution I right to freedom of
peech and expres ion.
'That i an ab lute lie," aid
Leonard Mungo, a Detroit lawyer and
a leader of the Rainbow Coalition'
F im in AthJ ti Commi i n.
He . id Darnbrot' e of the term
reflect'd" d judgment and ill In-
tent."
• 'This i a very insidio plot,"
Mungo aid at a n w conference.
"The public needs to kn ab ut the
web f deceit that n woven by
Coach Oambrot."
, WH YOU K you're
treated unfairly, you have to tard up
for wh t you believe in. Th First
Amendment i for everyon . It can't
b or one group and not another."
Dambrot h . ked a federal judge
t i ue a preliminary injun tion and
ive him b k hi j . He had a 20-34
r cord after two with the
Chippew .
Th Rainbow Co lition, mean
while, h fil d a friend-of-th -court
brief asking for permi ion to join
Central Michigan' fight to have
Dambrot' di rni al upheld.
Ja on plans to vi it the Mount
Pleasant campus next fall to help re-
tore racial harmony among it
16,357 students, Mun 0 aid. Many
alre dy had left for the ummer wh n
th c ndal rupted and Dambrot was
fired.
"The campus is very ho tile to
ward African-American tudents,"
id a 23-year-Old recent graduate
who declined t give hi name. "Stu
d n are very concerned.'
o MBROT W FIRED after
a B�ack walk-on player, Shannon
orri complained about the coach'
peech t the university' affinnative
tion offi . T unive ity hired
form r Ball State Unive ity .
tant co h Leonard D e, who .
Black, to replace Dambrot.
"Raci mid eply embedded in
t athletic program of thi i titu
tion and a total reorganization m t
ta e place immediately," aid
Robert by, head of Central
Michigan' ociation of Faculty
and Staff of Color.
But eight Black players have
joined Dambrot in hi uit against the
university. They contend their coach
used the word "nigger" with affec
tion and honor a motivational
term.
Dambrot aid he ked his players
if he could peak frankly and
"the N-word" in a Jan. 20 team
meeting after a Mid-American Con
ference 10 to Miami of Ohio. The
65-4310 w the fourth in a row for
Central Michigan.
"Many people em to have this
1950v idea of about how the term
'nigger" used in the 19905," aid
Dambrot' attorney, Jam Schuster.
"Th people took away from him
a career in Division I b ketball."
Demanded reparations
Korean prostitutes "comfort
women" file uit demanding repara
tions on 6/1/92 for $156,000 each for
4 years war time ex lavery for the
Japanese Army!