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The Miami News from Miami, Florida • 22

Publication:
The Miami Newsi
Location:
Miami, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
22
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2 THE MIAMI NEWS Wednesday, February 25, 1976 3C THE MIAMI NEWS February 25, 1976 rTTTTT will kill i1 the bay Development, not fishing w7 'mm The $oxer comes back mysterious as ever I Bloody Marys I taste great with Mffftgft I TAAKA I fK3 OUTDOORS Sport fishermen say commercial fishermen are destroying South Biscayne Bay. Not entirely, but a 90-day ban on netting is important Until further study is made: Kimberly health spa 3 NO SAUNAS (SHOWERS) NO WHIRtPOOt By HENRY SE1DEN Miami News Reporter Jackie Albright reappeared in Elizabeth Vtrrick Gym last night exactly as they remembered him. Beneath his blue wool cap was the same short, FRONT AND BEAD PAPKINA OPEN 6 DAYS 11 A.M. TO 3 A.M. 10333 N.W.

27th AVE. 80 100 PR00I- DISTILLED FROM GRAIN SAFRAC CO, N. 0., LA. My father used to pay Old Man Bennett 50 cents to fish in the canal that cut through his property, north of 163rd Street and Biscayne Boulevard. The Snake Creek cut through mangroves into Maule Lake, which is part of North Bjscayne Buy.

Fishing was good. We caught mangrove snapper, jack, grunt, pornpano, barracuda and hooked tarpon and snook from time to time. When fish in the canal stopped biting we'd try the southern edge of Maule Lake. Snapper liked to hide under rocks near shore. When 1 was growing up, which wasn't so long I spent many happy Saturday mornings there.

Fishing went to hell when development began in earnest in the late 1950s. Mangroves, the beginning of the bay's chain of life, were torn up in favor of seawalls. Dredging and construction followed and soon after, sewage and pollution. Today, Maule Lake is dirty but still is the least-developed area of North Biscayne Bay. Except for a section of mangroves near Interama, the North Bay is nearly void of plants.

Fishing is not worth talking about. The thing that ruined that section of bay was development. Not commercial fishing. That is what makes the current controversy far a greater evil, it is wrong to blame commercial fishermen. Until December nets were allowed in the bay but only to catch mullet' and shrimp.

Now commercial fishermen are allowed to keep anything they catch. They want mackerel, which demand 25 cents a pound on the market. Mullet go for 18 cents a pound. Mackerel haven't run in South Biscayne Bay as in past years, so a confrontation hasn't developed between commercial and sports fishermen or the law. At a meeting of the Florida Cabinet in two weeks, Dade County commissioners are expected to ask for a 90-day ban on netting of mackerel in the bay.

But the State Department of Natural Resources contends the ban is unnecessary, and is not likely to recommend that the request be granted. The Marine Patrol, meanwhile, has slopped issuing citations to commercial fishermen. You have to feel for commercial fishermen. They work hard for a living and then' fishing grounds are fast disappearing. The Bahamas are out and they aren't welcome here, yet they can't pick up and leave.

It took years to learn Biscayne Bay and it would take years to learn another water. And commercial fishermen elsewhere would welcome new competition with shotguns. Yet South Biscayne Bay is in delicate condition. if 1 VESPA HONDA BIG REBATE Diona iniir. ine iigiu-mue eyes stared ahead without expression as he quietly sat through the confusion of the weigh-in hassles surrounding him.

Albright, 24, is one of almost 300 amateur boxers competing in the four-day Florida-Caribbean Golden Gloves boxing championships beginning at 7 tonight in the Orange Bowl, but he has been set apart. Some original members of the City of Miami amateur boxing program consider him very special enough to rate him a possible commercial and sport fishermen are fighting over South Biscayne Bay so confusing. You have commercial people saying they have no impact on the bay and should be permitted to use it as they please. You have sport fishermen saying commercial people will ruin the bay forever. As often is the case in disputes such as this, the truth lies somewhere else.

If anything destroys South Biscayne Bay, it will be development and pollution. But it is hard to believe commercial fishermen who insist their activities won't have an impact on the bay. Of course, they will. They use nets and they keep everything they catch and that isn't good. Some local sportsmen, however, have blown the activities and impact of commercial fishermen out of proportion.

When it seems clear that development is by Bulkheading has been stopped, mangroves cover the shoreline and the water is clear, but fishing has deteriorated in the last five years. As the fish go, so goes the rest of the bay. The bay is sick. That frightens me. And 1 think about the commercial fishermen and their nets and what effect they will have on the sick bay should they be permitted to net at will.

Those nets won't ruin the bay, but they will certainly contribute to its downfall. For this reason I hope the Florida Cabinet Bruce Smathers, Robert Shevin, Phillip Ashler, Ralph Turlington, Gerald Lewis and Doyle Conner does grant the ban on netting in the bay. The impact of nets in the bay deserves further study before a final decision is reached. MOTORCYCLE ALBRIGHT American boy from the '50s," said Lee, "He looked like a Marine recruit before he became one." Before enlisting in the Marines in 1973, Albright fought in the state Golden Gloves tournament, and was knocked out in the finals. But his opponent was overage and ineligible, so Albright became the Miami representative to the Golden Gloves regional tournament in Knoxville, Tenn.

"The crowds there loved him," said referee Eddie Eckert, "He had them on their feet. When he won, he got big headlines the next day." In the first round of his first Knoxville bout, Albright never threw a punch. The referee threatened to throw him out of the bout for not fighting. Albright says it was strategy. He came out in the second round, knocked out his opponent, then proceeded to knock out everyone else to win the middleweight division.

"They had to carry those guys out of the ring," said heavyweight Woody Clark, also fighting in tonight's tournament, "and, Lord have mercy, he liked to have killed them." Albright lost in the National Golden Gloves tournament and made the Marine Boxing team, but fought little. His enlistment is over in 15 days and he took special leave to fight in tonight's tournament. His reappearance stirred memories, like the Albright stare at an opponent before a bout. "Those blue eyes seem to look through the other guys," said Eckert. "He psyches them out before a fight." "Lord have mercy," said Clark, "he looks at them like they're something good to eat." Said Lee, "He's melted a few guys down the way he looks at them.

I've seen him do it from the beginning but he never got that from the coaching staff here." They continued to talk about him throughout last night's weigh-in hard working, clean-cut, strong, square-jawed. Albright sal quietly nearby, looking like he was unsure of where he was. "He looks unconcerned," said Clark, "but he knows what' shappening." SEE US AT SALE! MIDWAY MALL 7901 W. FLAGLER ST. SAT.

FEB. 2 1ST 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. NEW HONDA FOURS champion though he has fought little in three years. What makes Albright different is that he looks like a fighter.

He has an aura. "He reminds you of fighters you saw 30 years ago," said Dick Lee, City of Miami Boxing Director. Albright, now a Marine lance corporal, came to Florida as an 18-year-old Ohio farm boy. He began working on a shrimp boat in Fort Myers. "I can't say I really liked it," he said.

"If the water was rough, I was seasick and sometimes we'd be out there 15 days at a time. "But was only seasick for the first day, or day-and-a-half. After that I'd get over it or get used to it." He learned about the Miami boxing program by reading a newspaper article in a paper that had been used to wrap a fish. Albright joined the Miami program and enjoyed success, some in the ring but mostly from his appearance. "People liked him because he looked like the All- i Roaring, but smooth.

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For others, it will be a beginning. "I've heard there are guys training all around town for this," said Dick Lee, City of Miami boxing director. Some have been in constant training. Local boxers like middleweight Milton Bankston, heavyweight Woody Clark, lightweights Richie Lee Roberts and Kenny Ryles are frequently featured on the weekly amateur boxing cards at Elizabeth Virrick Gym. Others, like those in the high school or novice divisions, may have just a few bouts but sometimes provide the most interesting action because of their inexperience.

"They just get in there and swing away," said Mickey Demos, Florida Golden Gloves Alumni Association president. "It sometimes can be hi- NOW $656 WERE $800 01" all filter kings: NEW HONDA MINITRAILS WITH THAT REAL MOTORCYCLE FEEL, KICK STARTER, KNOBBY TIRES, FOOT SHIFT TRANSMISSIONS. DEPENDABLE 4 STROKE ENGINE, (NO MESSY MIXING OF GAS AND OIL.) FRONT AND REAR BRAKES, SOFT GRIPS, PADDED SEAT, HYDRAULIC FRONT FORKS, HANDLEBAR CUT OFF SWITCH FUN TO RIDE, A I0Y TO OWN MAKES YOUR BOY PROUD Nobody! fewer tliiiii TO BE YOUR BOY. DICK LEE larious." For the open division boxers, like Roberts, Bankston and Clark, it is serious business. The tour-day tournament is a NOW '299 WERE $349 Anyone Can Be Financed! Anything Can Be Traded! Trade in Your Old Car or Cycle! faB) I imml Canton Opn; Man.

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Sun. 10 fa 4 p.m. DINERS CLUB 0 PICK UP A NO MONEY DOWN -TAKE OVER PAYMENTS JOHN CRITTENDEN must-win deal for boxers seeking to earn a berth on the 1976 U.S. Olympic team. Winners of the Florida Golden Gloves tournament qualify for the National Golden Gloves tournament, to be held in the Orange Bowl next month.

Boxers going to the U.S. Olympic trials must win one of our championships National Golden Gloves, National AAU, East-West or Serviceman's tournament. Lee believes local fighters have a good chance to win a Florida Golden Gloves title. "1 look for four or five guys from Miami to win it," he said. "But remember, Puerto Rico had seven guys make it last year.

They ended up beating some of our better guys. Either way, Florida might end up with a pretty good team to put in the Nationals (Golden Gloves)." Lee expects the Puerto Rican boxers to make a strong showing again. Besides entrants from around the state, the Florida Golden Gloves tournament attracts boxer's from Puerto Rico, Barbados, Ja-miaca and the Bahamas. Over 300 boxers have already entered. Three rings will be used tonight to accommodate all the boxers and Lee estimates 15 to ijO bouts in each ring.

The tournament will run through the finals on Saturday. Ringside seats are $4 tonight through Friday and $5 on Saturday. General admission is $2 tonight through Friday and $3 on Saturday. Ticket books for the entire tournament can be purchased for $10 for ringside and $5 for general admission. Tickets are available at: Orange Bowl, Gate Eight; Elizabeth Virrick Gym, 2600 S.

Bayshore Coconut Grove Cares, 3650 S. Dixie Hwy; Miami Dolphins office, 330 Biscayne North travel Bureau, 6105 NW 7th Ave; Miami Beach Recreation, 4221 Pine Tree North Miami Recreation, 776 NE 125 St; University of Miami ticket office, 6390 San Amaro Hialeah Recreation, 501 Palm Los Ar-tistas Coffee Shop, 4315 NW 7th Pouparina Flores, 700 SW 17th Richmond Heights Drugs, 14638 Lincoln Gables News Bookstore, 362 Andalusia; Bernie Blanck's Men's Wear, 127 Miracle Mile; Gables Honda, 234 Bird Rd. HENRY SEIDEN Vespa-Honda Look at the latest U.S. Government figures for other top brands that call themselves kwvMin tar. tar, mgcig nicotine, mgcig Sports Editor I 1.0 BrandO (Filter) 13 1.0 3rand (Menthol) Miami News Staff Photos by BILL REINKE Don Shula sends a chip shot toward the pin, and Joe Namath follows a shot from the rough U.S.

beautiful again to Jacklin 0.7 Brand (Filter) 0.6 3rand (Menthol) 0.7 11 Brand (Menthol) Brand (Filler) It 06 LOkIDA-CARIB 1 IAN Carlton Filter 0.2 Carlton Menthol 2 0.2 Carlton brands)-! mg.tar, 0.1 mg n.eot.ne A pe' IC me No wonder Carlton is fastest growing of the top 25 I 1 1 1 effort, he feels, is beginning to pay off. "I'm not playing badly," he said. "I'm not playing like I used to, either, but in the last three weeks I've finished 12th, 13th and 18th. In fact, I've made almost as much money already ($8,783) as I did all of last year. "I think my game is coming around.

It's just going to take time to sharpen it up a bit, that's all. "I don't think in terms of what might have been," said Jacklin. Continued from 1C somebody in front of you. 1 just got went soft." Jacklin has worked hard during the last year to regain his form. The era owes "I'm only 31 and I feel like I've got 10, 15 years of good golf left in me.

Besides, I couldn't have been happy here having made the move. I would have always wondered about playing at home. Now I know it's no good. I've got all that crap out of my system. "Everybody makes mistakes.

I was a boob and I paid for it. But if you're competitive enough, you come back. And that's what I'm doing. Coming back." Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. placed, ton they're not until May, and the tournament selections may have been made by then.

If the Hurricanes can win at home, they have a chance to be a contender," despite their inexperience. Fraser is trying to find out quickly what his new men can do. He sent two freshman pitchers against FSU in the ninth inning. Augie Ruiz, one of the freshmen, came into the game with one out and two men on base. "Is it all right," he asked when he reached the mound, "if I throw a few warmups?" Veteran infielder Billy Malpas doubled over with laughter.

Even freshmen are supposed to know that warmup throws are standard procedure for an arriving relief pitcher. But that's the kind of team Miami has young. Maybe Fraser should check to make sure all his pitchers know where home plate is. filter and Memtirji 2 mg. 2 tug.

nicotine av. pet cigarette, by FTC method. The theatrical riot is too much for pros mm, r.i'iilfc tsF tew II WrWi wHk mmmk flM Wt February 25 26 27 28 Action Starts At 7 P.M. with teams from FLORIDA PUERTO RICO BARBADOS JAMAICA Tamarac Pornpano Beach 1400 WW S. Fed.

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11106 N.W. 7th AVE. 751-9104 Continued from 1C land and Tampa next week on a six-game road trip, then comes home for six weeks. The Hurricanes don't leave Dade County again until April 22. The Tallahassee games against FSU are advantageously Fighting Saints may have fought to the finish Associated Press ST.

PAUL, Minn. "If we don't have the money to pay them at 1 1 a.m., we'll fold the goddamned franchise," said Minnesota Fighting Saints president Wayne Belisle. "Fold it and that will be that," said the 35-year-old St. Paul attorney who has spent the past several months trying to salvage the financially-troubled World Hockey Association franchise. Belisle met with the Saints players yesterday to inform them that possible emergency money from 1 group of Boston investors had fallen through.

"We can't raise the money we need here," he added. "If the town doesn't want a hockey team, OK." The Saints players did not receive their Feb. 15 paycheck and they are still without pay for the final two weeks of December. The team is scheduled to meet San Diego tonight, but the players are not expected to continue playing any further without pay. Since the financial troubles were disclosed in November, two high salaried players have gone to National Hockey League teams, reducing the twice-a-month payroll bv $20,000.

Rick Smith and Henry Bouiha left this month when it became increasingly apparent the Saints were plunging further into debt. "Most of our staff has been looking for jobs," said one front office employe last night. "Some harder than others, but I know we'll all be out tomorrow." Belisle was temporarily knocked out of his operating role at the end of January when he couldn't meet the payroll. A group of St. Paul businessmen bailed the team out for two weeks.

When the next payroll came up last week, the six businessmen bailed out and Belisle returned to captain the sinking ship. The franchise is also behind in its rent payments to the St. Paul Civic Center and in interest payments on hank loans. Robert Rosen, producer of "Blacik Sunday," the movie filmed in Miami recently, says he can better appreciate Joe Robbie's job of dealing with pro football players after working with about a dozen of them in the film. Rosen says he was faced with a threatened strike, on the Sunday when 40,000 persons were at the Orange Bowl and a riot scene was shot.

He says, "About four of them players representing the others came up to me and said, Ttiis is dangerous. We want more money or we're It was all I could do to keep from laughing in their faces, but I knew I might have blown everything if 1 did that. So I reasoned with them. "Fortunately, there were a couple of old ladies and young kids standing around them when they were talking. I said, 'l ook around you how can you say it's that I also reminded them that they knew what they'd he doing before they ever started.

That's all it took. They went back to work." STUDIO HEALT SAUNA WHIRLPOOL SHOWERS NORTH flg SOUTH Oe00000099C in the middle of my last season at Kansas City that it was a mistake to do both. But, as it turned out, it was too late. I learned you can't negotiate and motivate." Chuck Foreman, now making big bucks as a Minnesota running back, is taking a real estate course at the University of Miami to learn how to invest the cash Pittsburgh safety Mike Wagner says he is as anonymous as ever and happy about it despite the Steelers' two Super Bowl victories. "Terry Bradshaw can't go anywhere," he says, "but I can sit on a curb and read the newspaper without anybody bothering me." LA3V IOVI ART STUDIO FEATURING Andrews Ave.

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When he was a Dolphin rookie, a newspaper photographer took some shots of play- ers eating and when he asked for Mandich's name. Jim told him. "Buck Johnson." It appeared that way in the paper. So it wasn't that surprising to find that Mandich arranged for a friend to play his role for two days in "Black Sunday." Mandich just told him to make sure lie didn't take off his helmet. Of course, Mandich came out fine financially: he paid the substitute one-fifth of his wage 691-8300 SWANK HEALTH SPA 10-4 A.M.

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The response from the community was minimal in fact a Green Bay spokesman says one of the few players to get offered a job planned to stay in the city anyway Packer rookie defensive back Steve Luke, from Ohio State, had a big adjustment to make last season. Playing football since the fifth grade, he had been on the losing side just eight times The NFL Alumni Association went on record recently as favoring the college I PRi SENT FOR DU ow ONE OF THE MOST xri 63605 DOLPHIN FRONT-OFFICE MOVES: Public relations director Jim Johnson has resigned to join WIOD as an ad salesman; Bob Kearney, former newspaper sports writer, joins the publicity department Dolphin guard Bob Kuechenberg has gone from one Hollywood to the other: from Hollywood, to his new home in Hollywood, Cald. Maybe he'll be turning up I next as an ac.tor Hank Strain, New Orleans' new head coach, has learned from his days at Kansas City, where he negotiated player contracts and coached the team He just coaches now. Says Hank: I had decided TASTEFUll FEMININE DANCE TO fit FOUND ANYWHERE IN THE 11 itiiiiiiflts Lanier aw 18250 S. THAT BATH HOUSE OPERTim OPEN It AM 4 AM 1' I.IV Dixie Hwy 238-0660 GRATIS REFRESHMENT Studio trofc Srvi.9 A.attabte 1 rak 4 UA t-a Perrine FKEEtmilSTEIH 616 WHIRLPOOL IK ST.

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