February 2,2000 Page B2 (Tlje llovthuxò (Phemier /Sports ^Inrtlauò Lewis charged w ith murder R, ,.TtRS R iailks photo by A ssociated P ress , Tenessee Titans wide receiver Kevin Dyson (87) is tackled just short o f the goal by St. Lotus Rams Mike Jones, left, on the last play o f Super Bowl XXXIV at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta Sunday. Jan. 30. 2000. St Louis defeated Tennessee 23-16. All-star Baltimore linebacker Ray Lewis, arrested on murder charges in the killings o f two people, made a brief court appearance T uesday then returned tojail to await a preliminary hearing later this month. Lewis was the second N ational Football League player charged with murder in six weeks. On Dec. 14, Carolina Panthers receiver Rae Carruth was charged with first- degree murder in the death of his pregnant girlfriend, who was wounded in a drive-by shooting on Nov. 16 and died three weeks later. Lewis, 24, who had been scheduled toplay in the Pro Bowl in Honolulu, Hawaii, Sunday, instead appeared in Atlanta Municipal Court tor a hearing that was postponed until Feb. 24. He was held without bail. Prosecutor Larry Gardner asked for a delay in formally charging Lewis to have more time to gather information in the case. A court spokeswoman said Lewis will likely be charged with two counts o f felony murder, which carries a m a n d a to ry life se n te n c e if Evidence released in EBF boxing scandal case R euters Grandjury tapes, transcripts and other evidence unsealed by a federal judge appeared to show what prosecutors called a p attern o f bribes and c o rru p tio n by le a d e rs o f the International Boxing Federation, the Star-Ledger newspaper reported on Saturday. In testimony released on Friday, in c lu d e d in v id e o ta p e s and thousands o f pages o f transcripts, b o x in g p ro m o te rs and o th ers described how they made payments to IBF President Robert Lee Sr. and o th e r o ffic ia ls at th e boxing sanctioning organization in order to secure bouts, the newspaper reported. Lee, his son Robert Lee Jr. and two other IBF leaders were indicted on Nov. 4 on 32 counts o f bribery and other charges. A civil racketeering suit against the four was filed on Nov. 22. Prosecutors say the four accepted $338,000 in bribes over a 13-year period. Lee, on unpaid leave from the IBF, has been replaced by a court- appointed monitor. Among the material unsealed on Friday was a secretly taped F BI video o f IBF ratings chairman Doug Beavers apparently removing from his leg a c e llo p h a n e -w ra p p e d p ackage containing $5,000 and Lee picking it up after Beavers placed it on a table, the Star-Ledger reported. In affidavits, Beavers, who turned informant when confronted by federal authorities in 1997, said Lee called bribes “Christmas turkeys.” Legendary promoter Don King was am ong those who made regular payments, sometimes to gain bouts for unknown fighters, the Star- Ledger said Beavers told authorities. The newly unsealed evidence also indicated that promoter Bob Arum said he was coerced into paying Lee. President o f Top Rank in Nevada, Arum said he sought a ruling from the IBF to have heavyweight champion G eorge Forem an, whom Arum represented, fight German fighter Axel Schulz in 1995. The bout involved an exception to the rule that champions are only supposed to fight leading contenders. The Star-Ledger said the newly released docum ents quoted Arum as saying the exception “came at a price” — a $200,000 payment demanded by Lee in a hotel room. Arum told authorities he paid Lee $ 100,000, the first o f more I BF demands including one in which an IBF official allegedly tried to extract a quarter million dollars from Foreman, according to the Star-Ledger report. Lee also allegedly demanded an $800,000 payment to sanction a fight between Mike Tyson and George Foreman, according to B eavers, but the fight never materialized, the Star-Ledger said. Jury selection in the criminal trial was scheduled to begin on March 28. Gar Heard became the first victim ofMichael Jordan’s new career as the Washington Wizards coach was fired barely halfway through his first season. The announcement came just minutes after the Wizards held on for a 103-98 victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers Monday. Heard had guided the Wizards to only a 14-30 mark but the team was 2-3 since Jordan became president o f basketball operations. “ I think they had their mind made up when he got here,” Heard said. “I never got an opportunity to talk to him. Heard is believed to have two-plus years left on a three- year deal he signed last June. He was chosen by Wizards general manager Wes Unseld, who no longer has the final say on personnel decisions. "It was not predestined. It was not M ichael’s decision alone,” Unseld said. “M yself and Mr. (Abe) Pollin had input. The final say-so is frank, as far as basketball is concerned with Mike.” Rod Higgins, a teammate of Jordan's on the Chicago Bulls from 1984-86, was named interim coach. Higgins had been an assistant with the Golden State Warriors. Unseld made tonight’s announcement, which also included the firings o f assistants Butch Beard and Mike Bratz. Assistant Tree Rollins was retained and will assist Higgins, who gets his first head coaching job. Higgins has spent 13 seasons with the Warriors, playing seven and coaching six. After a 13-year playing career with seven teams, he joined the W amors as an assistant in the 1994-95 season. “ I watched him as a kid playing with the Bulls,” said forward Juwan Howard, a Chicago native. “I look forward to working with him.” “ It’s going to be a rough period,” guard Rod Strickland said. “Things can’t get any worse.” Higgins turns 40 on Monday and figures to make his coaching debut Tuesday at Cleveland. Jordan apparently is at the Super Bowl, making an endorsement appearance. He released a statement through the team “I mentioned that when I became a member o f the Washington Wizards that I would evaluate the team and the coaching staff,” Jordan said. “I felt it was necessary to make a change at this time. ryson wins in second round BW SroRTsWun lzaghe Outpoints Starie to Retain BO T itle on a S h o w tim e lampionship Boxing Doubleheader im the MEN Arena in Manchester, igland. irmer undisputed heavyw eight ampion Mike Tyson made short >rk o f Julius Francis, flooring the itish heavyweight champion five times on his way to a second-round knockout tonight on SHOWTIME. In the semi-main event, unbeaten Joe Calzaghe won a unanimous 12-round decision over David Starie to retain his World Boxing Organization super middleweight title. The fights aired on SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING at 10 p.m. ET/PT from Manchester, England. The card was promoted by Frank Housing from page 1 a m. to > 5 p.m . on an “aggress!ve “aggress! but ot crash schedule.” He added. “You an’t be a construction worker today 'ithout a boom box that’s slightly mailer than a pickup truck They turn rem on as soon as I leave the site.” To deal wit! with these and other issues, I ask you tojoin our team. So far it’s been one-way communication. We’re trying to guess what you want. We need to hear you say, ‘You got it almost right except. W arren in association with America Presents. Tyson (47-3, 1 NC, 41 K O sjo f Catskill, N.Y., thrilled the sold- out crowd o f 21,000 at MEN Arena by twice decking Francis (21-8, 11 KOs) o f London, England, in the first round. Tyson w as m aking his highly anticipated European debut. PIL Standings SPORTS STANDINGS WINTER 1999-2000 BASKETBALL Jefferson Benson Cleveland Lincoln Grant Madison Wilson Roosevelt Franklin Marshall BOYS SWIMMING Grant Wilson Lincoln Cleveland Benson Jefferson Madison Franklin Roosevelt W 9 8 5 4 4 4 5 5 5 2 7 1 1 8 8 W 4 6 5 L 0 7 IO 0 1 2 4 3 1 1 1 WRESTLING Madison Grant Benson Roosevelt Cleveland Jefferson Wilson Lincoln Franklin Marshall L J B,J M.J.C.B B,LJ,C,W J,G,W,C,B C.B.F.L.J TO 1 1 2 2 3 3 2 0 4 7 W L W W,L L,W W,L,F G,W,C L.B.G.C GIRLS SWIMMING Lincoln Grant Wilson Cleveland Franklin Jefferson Benson Madison Roosevelt IS M C,G C,B M.G B,W,G M,L,R R.B.J G.J.R.W.B J.R.F.C.M AÜIMŒIh EN CN MONDAYS •NAMEBRAND CIGARETTES-$3.00 • GPC’s - $2.30 • PURSES - $15.00 & UP • WALLET’S - $10.00 •HAIRWEAVE- $7.75 & UP OW NERS JO H N N Y & TH O R RESA H UFF CLO SED ON SUNDAY • MICROBRAIDS - $2.95 & UP •IN C E N SE -$1.00 2535 NE ALBERTA • HAIR ACCESSORIES (503) 331-1422 •T-SHIRTS •HATS E-M AIL T H O R ESSA @ A O L.C O M •W IG S FAX (503) 331-1422 •BACKPACKS PO R TLAND O R EG O N 97211 •PHONE CARDS i™ •CIGARETTE LIGHTERS “ I think everything the neighborhood wanted is in the M.O.U.,” he said. “If not, we can get it into the contract - that’s what partners get io do.” BASKETBALL Wilson Grant Lincoln Jefferson Benson Franklin Marshall Madison Roosevelt Cleveland Il IMU3IHHII11 II I till t Wizards coach Gar Heard fired by Jordan; Higgins hired A ssociated P ress also of o Decatur, f Decatur, was was taken taken to to Grady Grady convicted. also convicted. Hospital and later pronounced dead. Lewis, who already faces an assault Lewis’ lawyer was unavailable for charge in Maryland, was arrested and comment. Police were investigating charged with murder Monday after reports Lewis was among a group of two men were found stabbed to death passengers in a black limousine seen following an early-morning fight speeding away from the murder scene outside a nightclub in Atlanta. in Atlanta’s fashionable Buckhead Richard Lollar, 24, ofDecatur, Georgia, district. died at the scene. Jacinta D. Baker, 21, JOHNTAE’S IMPORTED TOBACCO • WILD GROW TH-$7.00 •MON-FRI10 am-6pm •SATllam-6pm BUY FIVE PACKS GET $1.00 OFF OFFER EXPIRES LOCATED ON CORNER OF 26TH A ALBERTA E zm zm xi r» » » » » rT T T i w k 10 8 8 0 2 2 7 3 6 5 3 4 2 1 8 9 10 0 W 6 4 5 3 3 1 5 7 L 0 0 2 2 3 3 0 0 3 4 1 6