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For George Delacorte Adorning standalone article NY Times 05 17 79N G+yngta l.) 1979 The New York 'Times tr04*,�tolitan Report New York, New Jersey, Connecticut For George Delacorte,,,- Adorning TOl�e Citpls a Dream'C.,6rpe. Tiaue By LINDA CHARLTON `. 1n this age of angst, George Dela- come i an outrageous anomaly. He is rich and -fiat ashamed of it; he likes giv- ing lavish presents and getting credit for it, and he is probably, even, a happy e ..man. ' He also Will be 85 years old on June 20, which is worth mentioning largely because 'it becomes almost irrelevant within a few seconds of meeting hire. It is note that his lean; tanned frame is sprightly, or that his voice and manner could be those of almost any age above youngest manhood. It'0 : , just that for George 'i; Lomas Delacorte, aself-made very rich man and a self -designated adgrner of his na- tive city, there is so much else going on that ' it seems unlikely.he gives much thought to being nearly 85. While it is true that he has been "re- tired" from Dell Publishing for more than five years, it is also true that every day in season -- that is, when he is living in his. 20-room apartment on Fifth Avenue in the 80's and not in Palm Beach or Connecticut or skiing at Klosters -- he still walks the two miles or so to his office. And always,. both ways, he tries to go through Central Park. He's got a lot of things to look at there, like the Delacorte Theater, the Alice in Wonderland statue; the zoo's musical clock with its revolving ani- mals or the Columbus Circle fountain. Of course, he could vary his route and still find, plenty of objects for his fond, proprietary interest. There's the fountain down in City Hall Plaza, the gates at Columbia. University, another fountain at Bowling Green and the jet d'eau in the East River (as soon as the current mechanical problems are solved and it is back in operation). Soon, if all goes according to plan and it usually does, for George Dela- Alice In Wonderland statue in Central Park Continued on Page B7 i rw cvew r oric i ins/ rani noaerroa George T. Delacorte at Central park Zoo's clock Ex -Lufthansa Agent Guilty In � s M"Ou1lzon AirpoYt ? 'heft By DAVID BIRD A 46-year,-old former Lufthansa cargo wald said he hid the money first in a gar - agent was-foiuid guilty yesterday of help- bage dump. mg to plan and carry out the $6 million We Later, he said, he and Mr, rner re- armed robbery last December at the air- trieved the money and buried it in Mr. line's Kennedy International Airport backyard. cargo terminal. .Gruenewald's Mr. Gruenewald testified that he be - Louis Werner, the only person charged came extremely nervous and did not feel so tar in the case, was convicted of being the $5,000 cut he received was worth it. the inside man in what turned out to be. He continued: .the largest cash robbery in the nation's. "I told Werner not to bother me again history. None of the $5 million in currency with any money like that. It was not and $1 million in jewels .that was takerl worth putting my job on the line , for has been recovered. $5,000. I said it would have to be a malicm. Mr. Werner was also found guilty ' of We started to plan the big heist. We knew stealing $227000 irk foreign currency from Lufthansa always stpred $3 million to $5 the same Lufthansa terminal in 1976. million in the valuables room, and it was The jury, which began its deliberations for us pretty attractive. We talked Tre- at 4:15 P.M. Tuesday and announced its quently about a big heist. And by August, verdict at 3 : 35 P.M. yesterday, found Mr.' 1978, we had a plan." Werner guilty of three of the six charges The plan they developed, according to stern ling from the two thefts. He faces. the prosecution, is virtually the same one. up,to25 years in prison. ' used by the five masked gunmen who During Mr. Werner's 10-day trial in burst into the Lufthansa cargo building Federal District Court in Brooklyn before and grabbed the cargo of cash and jew- Judge Mark A. Costantino and the jury of elry on Dec.11 at 3 A.M. 10 men and two women, the prosecution Two other men, Angelo Sepe and relied heavily on testimony by Peter James Burke, both known criminals and Gruenewald, a fellow Lufthansa em- described by investigators as suspects, ployee and a former close friend of Mr. have been arrested on charges of violat- Werner's: ing parole by associating with each other Witness Describes Plotting but have nct been charged with the Luft- hansa robbery. y Mr. Gruenewald said he had helped Mr. Wemer's attorney, Stephen Laifer, Mr. Werner, who had worked for the air- charged that prosecution witnesses were line for more than a decade, in an earlier trying "to take themselves off the hook" theft from Lufthansa and that the two of and that the case against Mr. Werner was them then ,.plotted in detail last year's built on a "foundation of mud." much larger robbery. Also called by the prosecution was Although he admitted his involvement Janet Barbieri, Mr. Werner's 36-year-old in the earlier theft, Mr. Gruenewald said girlfriend. She resisted testifying at first, he bowed out of last'year's robbery when saying that problems with her heart he grew disenchanted with the men re- made it dangerous for her to take the cruited to stage it. stand. Mr. Gruenewald was granted im- Later, after she was arrested as. a ma- munity from prosecution in exchange for terial witness for the prosecution, slie col - his testimony. i lapsed thrti.-e times in court and at one In describing the earlier theft, Mr. time responded to questioning while lying Gruenewald said that Mr. Werner turned on a spectator's bench with a psychiatrist up at his house shortly after midnight on at her side. Oct. 9.1976, with a cardboard box bearing Mrs. Barbieri was released after testi- a Lufthansa sticker and containing Eying that Mr. Werner had told tier that $22,000 in foreign currencv. Mr. Gruene- "he never robbed Lulthans�a." te,BeautifyingFibi Delacor City Is Dream come True Continued From Page B1 coi-Le, as for many men of wealth and the determination to match the preci- sion of their intentions — there will be another fountain, this one in Times Square, his fifth. He has always loved fountains, and has in mind something with Broadway's classic comedy - tragedy theme for the newest Delaa- corte fountain. .What About a Waterfall? And it almost certainly will have a plaque somewhere neither vulgarly proiclamdatory nor foolishly modest proclaiming that lie gave the city this founuain,l as he has given it thA:_-- o'tlhlers. and the theater and statues, and would like to give it a lot. of other things, in- cluding a waterfall rippling down from Belvedere Castle if the -engineering snags can be -worked out. Mr. Dela- corte loves giving things to the city, and he isn't interested in the traditional anonymity. On the contrary. His clock . pleases him, with its bronze carrousel with dancing animals that perform every hour to the accompani- ment of gay glockenspiel tunes. On a recent aftemooft, the usual crowd of several dozen had gathered below for the hourly show as the hands touched 4 P.M. But the electronic timepiece that controls the machinery — and keeps more accurate time — was perhaps two minutes behind. "We have a lot of trou- ble with that clock," he .,---.aid with a sigh. Carousel's Timing Is Off Then came the quarter-hours being struck, and then of discouraging lapse of a second or two before the monkeys atop the carrousel began to strike the time. The veterans in the crowd, who knew wh"at, ,T?i,-as happening, were un- mc_,z v- i n 2 ` � bait o began to drift away. C_) ' ' I don't. like the gap, but there's noth- ing you can do about it," he said as the last of the four Strokess; faded and, after a'nanosecond'SQ hesitatilon, the carrou ,a- c "" Wigan to revolve. The bear, as al - laved his tambourine, the ele- phant: squ,-::°-zed an accordion and thl.e_ goat-, the e-ndearinlu of the ani- mals. C 01 D- � T;Ifl--- 5a -:!!,. at played the flute. The crrui�;-,J', charmed and sated with snapshots, moved off, and George Delacorte with it, smiling. "We change #+,,n - usic four times a year," he said. A fe-,w, steps away, he nudged his corn- panlon aind said: "There's a man wi two Dell books — I can tell by the blue- green," meaning the color ' of the page - edgings. lie started Dell in 1921. Gazing Fondly at Alice "I made $56,000 my first year, never had a lost year," said this dapper man of medium height, his black loafers beating a regular, moderate pace along the paths of the park. '"Die last yC.'a r 1. was in the business I did $100 million in business." He also proclaimed, "I'M not interested in the business of buying and selling, What he is interested in lay around the next few curves. I I Look at it — even os "' he -said, gazing• fondly at J! e' today, 0 de Creeft's tran.nslation of Alice can�6_1 Set,V- eral of her friends in'to a statu:!e. tll.ia',L drays children as h. o t toast does butt, e r (Mr. Delacorte calls Mr. de Creeft "old de Creef t, he's 95. ") A soccer ball lay nestled between the paws of the White Rabbit, the stem of ......... ft=W small k I X t whose watch is the only part of the statue that has actu.ally had to be re- placed, although much of it iskept bril- liantly polished'by the�continuing pres- sure of sma-11 feet., knees, hands and adoratiol.a. The Problem of Graffiti Not far away is the bench nea-71 U his late first wife. Nlarga-Acital, se,--: to SUL il,11. the afternoons .in her wheelchair her invalidism; the statue is in, her honor be --cause she "loved all, chil- dren." Even on this quiet late 10-L-- e `k,.Teekday afternoon, a cansid,817--able nu(mber of cb-D'dre,ri were returning thEll croml-oh- m e w_., . There Is ,2� continuing problem 01 grafts I' Ll Loda.,', Mr. Delacor�te noted,, the message, was, "sex Is Fun Well that's all right," he said. "I think I'll leave it there. Vandalis: of which graffiti are the least parry. cost'hirri between $15,000 and $20,000 a year. In making his gifts to the city, he has also guaranteed their maintenance for 15 years ("I"m going to hive to be 1.15," -he says) and left funds in his will for their upkeep. He has a staff of three taking care of "my things all around the city It isn L so much that George Dela- corte gives a great deal of his money away, it is the way in which he does it He doesn't just give some money for this or that, but for a specific this and a specific that. Ile Roosevelt Island Jet vtli have given rnon!5�_-y all my life to various charities — still do,"' he said, "but I then- I never saw any -thing for it, never got any pleasure except just mailing a check and getting a letter," And then there was the day when hfn, was talking to the late Newbold Morris, then Commissioner of Parks, about. plans for a S11-lakespeare Theater in Central Park. It hasn't always been easy. Take jet of water at the tip of Roosevelt- Is- land, for instance. ,It has been plagued with -problems sine the beginning, such as the filth of the East Rimer that clogs the water -intake s-, "-strem (filth that has included, thus J;',-ar, 11 dro-u-vned bodiesjAr. Delacorte, avems) and a hit- and-run tug that caused major damage - at one point. And the flo-,;',,er beds that he optimistically plan"s, in, the parks and then is forced to replace with con- crete. But he has great visions for the future, (,,ji would to rteldll-1 �ip Plaza") even though tAhi :r-- r e ar,,,--- c, n. u. - ing discourage nn, ents . "But then" he said, striding toward the 79th Street exit 01 the Park, and home, "if yget coru4 wouldn't do am,17thing THE NEW YORK TIMES, THURSDA The I� Newyork i Times ShowerCurtains! Repeal of Prohibition, DeeernbeT 6. 1933. Make a big splash with this gTC-aA news Story. Sports of The Times.. A unique page covenng historical ssorting events since -the turn .of the centur-�,,,-. "'deal for hang - ',-ng.' I bay:..bay:..famllv Morn, "d- en or bay:.. too. Han di screen printed in black on whit.e Vinyi on standard size 6'%_69. an aid l Radll lha� =1 CLI — C C CZ1 C Times i)ep-grtment P.O. Box 4253 CLirw-Innati, Ohio -1 45,214 Cjj,3,cecS page (curtain) LJ Z+P.U.14 I of The Tin-ws I 1mm1ar.:_:ifion lns-pectors Added t S-nd to- WASHINGTON, May 16 (AP) — AT,-i i additional 81 inspectors will be on duty at I Name i United States ports of entry beginning j U to help detect illegal immigrants and dl,_-oun-cerfeit- immigration documents, tI - �_hc- , u.sn"Ce DEDar-ment said tody. Sixty7- 1 E, 0, f On e nev„j . n s pe c T o ­, i I bstationed i r- ad rizona, with � � lorn lexas, Cal]"r 'i a anA m�_ i � goinC_' to San, Ysidro, 'a."' 11. and '13 going j I to El Paso, Tex. I Anthony Lewis on the Op -Ed Page Z11) Monday and Thursday L The New York Times .. 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