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To: Brian Sullivan who wrote (9769)9/29/2003 1:01:50 AM
From: Brian Sullivan  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 793670
 
Can the Democrats accept this defeat, or will it be another stolen election?

Poll: Calif. set to oust Davis

By John Ritter, USA TODAY
SAN FRANCISCO — California voters are ready to fire Gov. Gray Davis and replace him with actor and political novice Arnold Schwarzenegger, a USA TODAY/CNN/Gallup Poll finds.
(Related link: Poll results)
usatoday.com

Schwarzenegger captures 40% of the vote in the USA TODAY/CNN/Gallup Poll.
By Ringo H.W. Chiu, Getty Images

A week before the vote on recalling the two-term Democrat, 63% of probable voters say they will vote to remove him from office. Three-quarters are unhappy with his job performance. (Related story: Arnold looking good)

Schwarzenegger, a Republican who is making his first run for elective office, captures 40% of the vote in the poll. His closest pursuer, Democratic Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante, receives 25%.

A poll Sept. 9-17 by the Public Policy Institute of California had Bustamante with 28% and Schwarzenegger 26%, indicating that Schwarzenegger gained support after last week's TV debate.

More than two-thirds of independents favor ousting Davis in the USA TODAY/CNN/Gallup Poll. Schwarzenegger picks up more independents and crossover voters than Bustamante. More ominous for Davis: Nearly a third of Democrats plan to vote for the recall.

"It's looking like a stunning defeat for the Democratic Party at a time when nationally, Bush and the Republicans are suffering," says Bruce Cain, a political science professor at the University of California-Berkeley. "This just shows we've got a very cranky electorate in California that is very unhappy with the status quo."

Earlier California polls had shown the percentage of voters favoring recall as low as 53%.

State Sen. Tom McClintock, a conservative Republican who has been under pressure to quit the race and allow the GOP to unite behind Schwarzenegger in this overwhelmingly Democratic state, drew 18% in the poll. That's up slightly from previous surveys.

McClintock has rebuffed all calls to drop out, but the poll suggests that Schwarzenegger may not need his votes to become the first entertainer to lead California since Ronald Reagan in 1966.

Schwarzenegger receives a favorable approval rating from 63% of voters, down from 82% in a USA TODAY poll in August. By contrast, 54% have an unfavorable opinion of Bustamante.

Only 24% of voters approve of Davis' job performance. He could be the first California governor to be run from office by the voters and only the second in U.S. history. Schwarzenegger's popularity with the voters seems not to be driven by his Hollywood star power: 46% say they aren't a fan of his movies; 39% say they are.

usatoday.com



To: Brian Sullivan who wrote (9769)9/29/2003 1:21:48 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793670
 
Confident Schwarzenegger

If the "Bandwagon" effect now takes over, Arnold can win. Then, what does he do? He takes over Davis' staff and appointees, and faces a hostile Legislature. And a Press that is slavering to roast him. Not a pretty picture.

I know the LA Times Editors are setting there with a "bombshell" article on Arnold's past that could kill him. Will they use it, or lose it? If figure if they are going to run it, they will do so by next Friday.



To: Brian Sullivan who wrote (9769)9/29/2003 3:21:33 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793670
 
This has been my comment all week: "I think this whole thing about Tom being a spoiler has created the movement for Arnold. The voters are taking their second choice; Tom's their first choice."
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Crunch Time in Recall Race
Schwarzenegger appears to gain ground as McClintock's aide all but concedes. Camejo and Huffington reassess their campaigns.
By Mitchell Landsberg, Matea Gold and Daryl Kelley
Times Staff Writers

September 29, 2003

Arnold Schwarzenegger appeared to pick up momentum Sunday in his drive to unseat Gov. Gray Davis, with a new poll showing his candidacy on the ascent, and the campaign director for state Sen. Tom McClintock (R-Thousand Oaks) all but conceding that the actor and fellow Republican was likely to win.

With just over a week left until California's first gubernatorial recall election, candidates adjusted their strategies to account for the new dynamics of a race that increasingly is becoming a showdown between Schwarzenegger and Davis.

Left-leaning independent candidate Arianna Huffington said she is reconsidering her role in the race, although she did not say she would drop out. Green Party candidate Peter Camejo said he is staying put, but will understand if supporters vote for Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante in order to stave off a Republican victory. Bustamante, for his part, tried to mend fences with Huffington, whom he had belittled in a debate last week, and expressed concern that Davis has not endorsed his candidacy.

With the political jockeying as a backdrop, Schwarzenegger took his campaign to the air, barnstorming through three small cities in less than five hours as he and his aides sounded increasingly confident of victory. "I am the kind of governor ... ," Schwarzenegger told a crowd of 1,500 in an airport hangar in Santa Maria, before correcting himself, "I will be the kind of governor...."

Schwarzenegger's appearances were larded with some of the most ferocious language of the campaign. "This is now hand-to-hand combat," he declared at one appearance in Redding, wagging his right index finger at the crowd. "We are not in the trenches. This is war."

There were no significant policy shifts evident in any of the campaigns Sunday, as the candidates hammered at familiar messages, sometimes with newly honed zeal. Davis, meanwhile, remained closeted in Los Angeles, conferring with aides and effectively yielding the campaign day to the candidates who seek to succeed him.

A new CNN-USA Today poll presented bleak numbers for the Democratic incumbent. The poll, which is conducted by Gallup, showed the recall succeeding 63% to 35%, and Schwarzenegger leading among the replacement candidates with 40% of the vote to 25% for Bustamante and 18% for McClintock.

That is a far wider margin for the recall, and far higher numbers for Schwarzenegger, than other recent polls have shown. A previous CNN-USA Today poll also had the recall leading by a higher margin than other polls.

Internal polls from some of the candidates' campaigns have shown a similar shift, but still show a much tighter race.

(The most recent Times poll, conducted three weeks ago, showed the recall to be a tossup, with Bustamante narrowly leading Schwarzenegger among the potential replacement candidates. A new Times poll is due out this week.)

The CNN-USA Today poll, conducted among 1,007 Californians between Thursday and Saturday, assumed a low turnout of 51% — lower than election officials expect — in determining which were the most likely voters. It had a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points, according to the pollsters.

The poll caught the McClintock campaign flat-footed, and campaign director John Feliz all but conceded that Schwarzenegger may be too far ahead to catch. In fact, he said that private polls — though not one by McClintock's campaign — had shown Schwarzenegger moving up after the candidates debate Wednesday, with Bustamante falling back and McClintock receiving a slight immediate uptick, then stabilizing.

"That's what we hear," Feliz said. "Arnold is moving and Tom has settled down, but Tom's not dropping. I still contend when this is done, Tom will beat Bustamante. He'll come in second.

"I think this whole thing about Tom being a spoiler has created the movement for Arnold. The voters are taking their second choice; Tom's their first choice."

McClintock himself was far more optimistic, sketching a scenario in which the dynamics of the race turned in his favor.

"By the time Davis and Schwarzenegger stop shooting at each other a lot can change," he said in an interview during a break at a candidates forum in Sacramento. "By the time all of the shooting is over, we could very well be the last candidate standing."

Still, Schwarzenegger has emerged in the last week as the popular choice within the Republican Party, and appeared likely to become the party's official choice today. The board of directors of the state GOP was planning to meet in Burbank to decide whether to issue an endorsement. Party leaders declined to endorse any candidate at the state party convention earlier this month.

The Sacramento candidates forum, hosted by the Asian Pacific Islander American Political Assn., drew four hopefuls — Bustamante, Camejo, Huffington and McClintock — each of whom delivered 15-minute speeches and answered questions. Before and after, they squeezed in interviews with reporters.

Bustamante emphasized the importance of his candidacy as a backup in case the recall succeeds, underscoring Democratic anxiety about the tight race. The lieutenant governor defied Davis' pleas that no Democrat join the race to replace him, and has since sought in vain to get the governor's support for his no-on-recall, yes-on-Bustamante campaign.

"We had hoped by the time we had got to the end that we would be able unify the family, the Democratic family," Bustamante said. "We're still hopeful that the governor will see that we're viable and people should clearly vote for us."

He said he believes that the race will be determined by the few remaining undecided voters who will make up their minds in the last few days before the election. He also acknowledged that his candidacy could be hurt by the presence on the ballot of Camejo and Huffington, who are peeling away some liberal votes.

"They're clearly going to have some impact," Bustamante said. "Don't know exactly to what extent. We've seen polls that they're going to be somewhere in the 4- to 8-[point] range, and of course, every percentage point is going to be very important."

Camejo acknowledged that some of his supporters will feel compelled to support Bustamante in order to keep Schwarzenegger from winning. But he said that every voter has to make the decision individually.

"This is a decision the voters make, not the party," he said. "There will be voters who want to vote for me and instead will vote for Cruz. I understand that. I'm not angry at them."

Huffington voiced concern about Schwarzenegger gaining ground in the polls, and said that might affect her role in the race.

"I've said from the beginning that it's very important as we're coming close to the race to look at who has the greatest chance to be governor," Huffington said. "And if it's going to be Arnold Schwarzenegger, that's not good news for the state. So this is absolutely something I'm looking at."

Huffington said she is not planning on throwing her support to another candidate, but added, "I'm definitely considering a lot of things."

During the forum, Huffington's calls for public financing of campaigns drew support from Bustamante, whom she has criticized for accepting millions of dollars in funding from casino-owning Indian tribes. The two clashed in last week's debates, and Bustamante had angered her with what she perceived as a condescending attitude.

"Would you accept my endorsement of your proposal, and would you allow me to help you work on this proposal to make sure that we do have publicly financed campaigns in California?" Bustamante said Sunday.

"Why, Cruz, that's wonderful news," Huffington said with a sly smile. "I would obviously be delighted to have your endorsement of the initiative. As you know," she added, laughing, "I believe in conversions and I believe in redemption."

During his busiest day of the campaign so far, Schwarzenegger addressed rallies at airports in Santa Maria, Monterey and Redding. Such frantic traveling is unusual for Schwarzenegger, whose campaign appearances have focused on Southern California and the larger cities of Sacramento, San Diego, San Jose and Fresno.

In Redding, where a crowd of more than 1,000 was warmed up by a Marine veteran of the Iraq war and a young singer doing a soft-rock version of the "Battle Hymn of the Republic," Schwarzenegger gave easily his fiercest speech of the campaign.

He savaged Davis, saying the governor "has terminated hope, he has terminated opportunity, he has terminated jobs, he has terminated education, and now it's time to terminate him."

In his speeches, Schwarzenegger did not mention Bustamante or McClintock, training his ire on Davis.

"Desperate Davis is going to do all kinds of tricks," Schwarzenegger said in Santa Maria. "He's going to start a dirty campaign now." But, he added, "I have faith in the California people. I trust the California people."

It was actually Schwarzenegger who first attacked Davis in campaigns ads, despite a promise earlier not to wage a negative campaign. Davis, however, has begun to target Schwarzenegger in his anti-recall ads, which seek to persuade Democrats that they cannot risk turning the state over to a Republican governor. Political analysts have long warned that Davis has to tread lightly because many voters have been turned off by his reputation as a ruthless campaigner.

Officials of the anti-recall campaign unveiled a 15-second television ad Sunday that asks ominously: "Have questions about Arnold Schwarzenegger? So do a lot of people. He ducks tough questions. Didn't vote in 13 of the last 21 elections. And now he refuses to debate the governor he's trying to replace."

The ad is expected to begin airing statewide today. As it became apparent last week that Schwarzenegger was the front-runner and Davis' anti-recall campaign was in trouble, the governor challenged the actor to a debate. Schwarzenegger did not accept.

"This is boiling down to a very direct choice between retaining the governor or choosing Schwarzenegger as the alternative," said Larry Grisolano, manager of the anti-recall campaign. "We're telling people what the consequences of that choice are."

With about three-quarters of Democrats opposed to the recall, Democratic Party consultant Bob Mulholland called it "absolutely critical" for the recall opponents to win over at least another 10% of the rank and file in the next eight days.

He said efforts to persuade Democrats to go to the polls Oct. 7 and vote no on the recall will pick up substantially this week, when several million voters will be barraged by mail and phone calls. In addition, prominent Democratic officials such as New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson will be trooping through the state to reinforce the message.

"Every day in this state, there will be massive campaign activity," Mulholland said. "A person will read it in the papers, see it on the news, get a piece of mail, a phone call and in many cases, a knock on the door."

Davis spent Sunday in Los Angeles, keeping a low profile. Campaign press secretary Gabriel Sanchez said Davis spent part of the day "conferring with advisors on campaign matters and going over bills with his legislative aides."

Also Sunday, several of the state's largest newspapers ran editorials with their recommendations for the election. The Times, Sacramento Bee and San Jose Mercury-News all urged "no" votes on the recall and gave no recommendation for a replacement candidate, saying none measured up. The Oakland Tribune recommended a "no" vote on the recall, but a vote for Schwarzenegger on the second part of the ballot.

The San Diego Union-Tribune urged a "yes" vote on the recall, but did not include its recommendation for a replacement. The Union-Tribune flatly declared Davis "a failed governor."

But the newspapers that urged voters to retain him were hardly more flattering. The Oakland Tribune said Davis should be allowed to remain governor because he "has neither broken the law nor done anything immoral in office that could pass for malfeasance."

The Bee, which has historically supported Democratic candidates for governor, was even sharper, saying Californians "have come to understand that the candidate who in 1998 offered 'experience that money can't buy' has proved to be a governor who can at least be occasionally rented."

The paper said, however, that voters knew that when they reelected Davis in November. Moreover, it said none of the replacement candidates would be a "trade-up for California."

Times staff writers Joe Matthews, Scott Glover and Gregg Jones contributed to this report.
latimes.com



To: Brian Sullivan who wrote (9769)9/29/2003 3:58:36 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793670
 
A very well-written and interesting article in the "LA Times" debunking Arnold. But still not the really nasty one they are supposed to have on tap. "Any man can get what he desires provided he's willing to pay whatever price.' "
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

An Ethos Developed in the Gym
Schwarzenegger credits bodybuilding with forming his character. Extreme drive, ego, confidence and steroids are part of his past.
By Mark Arax
Times Staff Writer

September 29, 2003

Bit by bit, Arnold Schwarzenegger chips away at his myth. The stories he told in the 1970sof orgies and pot smoking and cruel tricks were fantastic fibs, he now says, a way to draw attention to himself and his beloved sport of bodybuilding.

But the men who sweated beside him in those years — fellow Mr. Olympias and Mr. Universes — say Schwarzenegger is tidying up his past as he eyes a new crown, the California governorship. The Schwarzenegger they knew was extreme in everything, from the weights he pounded to the anabolic steroids he consumed, from the merciless tricks he played on lesser men to the women he stole from friends.

"If he wanted your girlfriend, he'd take her. If he wanted your bodybuilding crown, he'd grab that too," said Bob Delmonteque, an 84-year-old psychologist and bodybuilder whosephysique has graced muscle magazines for 65 years. "Whatever it took to win and stay the center of attention, Arnold did."

Schwarzenegger, 56, still boasts about his grueling two- and three-hour workouts at the old Gold's Gym in Venice. But like many champion bodybuilders, he rarely speaks about the pharmaceutical shortcuts he took.

In his books and interviews, Schwarzenegger mostly skirts or downplays his use of steroids while conceding their health risks, which can include liver and heart damage. "I took them under a doctor's supervision once a year, six or eight weeks before competition," he told Playboy magazine in 1988. Schwarzenegger said he began taking steroids when he arrived in the U.S. at age 20 because "all you want to do is be a champion and you take what anyone else is taking."

But Schwarzenegger's old gym mates say he consumedfar more muscle-building drugs over a longer period than hehas acknowledged. They say Schwarzenegger told them that he began taking Dianabol, a popular steroid, at the age of 17 in Germany and routinely injected other testosterone-like substances after arriving in America in 1968.

"I was in Munich in the 1960s, and Arnold gave me my firstbottle of Dianabol," said Rick Wayne, a former Mr. Universe who has chronicled bodybuilding in magazines and books. "He was 19 at the time and said he had been taking them for several years."

Without steroids, Wayne and others say, Schwarzenegger would not have surpassed his greatest rival, Sergio Oliva, the one bodybuilder who made the "Austrian Oak" look small.

On Sunday, Schwarzenegger would not respond to assertions that he relied more heavily on steroids than he has acknowledged. His spokesman, Sean Walsh, would say only that Schwarzenegger has publicly admitted using steroids at a time "when the impacts and health concerns were not well known."

Out of the Basement

From 1970 to 1980, Schwarzenegger won seven Mr. Olympia titles, the last one decided by judges who were his business partners and close friends — a contest that to this day stirs heated debate. More than anyone, he took lifting weights out of the basement of the local Y and turned it into an integral part of America's fitness craze.

Back in those early years, Schwarzenegger could take over a room with his heft and humor, his former gym partners say. But often he could be mean-spirited. According to several of those workout partners, Schwarzenegger played a particularly cruel joke on his now-deceased bodybuilding friend Don Peters.

At the time, Schwarzenegger was single and made no secret of his attraction to Peters' girlfriend, a beauty contest winner. One day after a fight with Peters, the girlfriend went home with Schwarzenegger. That night, Schwarzenegger told her he needed a favor. Would she mind calling his lawyer to reschedule an appointment? Schwarzenegger dialed the number, but it wasn't to the lawyer's house, according to several bodybuilders familiar with the incident. Instead, he had phoned Peters.

It took only a moment for the ruse to become clear. As Peters and his girlfriend discovered each other's voices, Schwarzenegger shouted into the phone. "I just [made love to] her. I just [made love to] her," recalled Gene Mozee, a bodybuilder and muscle magazine editor who was friends with both men.

"Peters drove over and banged on Arnold's door, but he wouldn't answer," Mozee said. "All he heard was Arnold laughing."

Mozee said that Schwarzenegger told him the story and that he confirmed it through Peters. When contacted by The Times, the old girlfriend said she did not want to discuss the past.

As for Schwarzenegger, he could not recall the specific incident, according to spokesman Walsh. "Don and Arnold were longtime friends, and there was no conflict between them about any of the women the two men dated," Walsh said.

Sometimes, Schwarzenegger enjoyed disgracing his targets in full public view, veteran bodybuilders said. Gold's Gym regular Norman Williams recalled the time an earnest young man walked in seeking advice from his hero. No matter how hard he worked, he told Schwarzenegger, his muscles wouldn't grow.

Schwarzenegger told him to remove his shirt and slather his body with oil used to lubricate the weight equipment. He then ordered him to start flexing and to bellow louder with each pose. Only then, Schwarzenegger said, would the muscles bulge.

"Pretty soon, the gym was filled with this guy screaming," Williams said. "The guys were turning their backs trying not to crack up, but Arnold kept a straight face. He loved making a fool out of people."

The young man, exhausted, wanted to wipe off the oil. "Oh no," witnesses quoted Schwarzenegger as saying. "It needs to saturate the muscles. It's the only way to get bigger." The guy walked out with oil bleeding through his shirt.

When asked to respond, Schwarzenegger's spokesman chalked up the incident to "locker room humor."

Today, the 21-inch arms are gone, and the massive chest has given way to gravity. But bodybuilding remains Schwarzenegger's implicit metaphor. His message to voters, boiled down, is that he would turn the state's flab into muscle and apply his legendary work ethic to make California flush again.

"Bodybuilding is my roots," he wrote in his recently updated Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding. "I credit bodybuilding with giving me not just physical attributes but also with laying the foundation for everything else I've accomplished."

It began with a pair of biceps that seemed to grow whenever he looked at a weight, and a set of calves so stubbornly puny that back in Germany, he used to pose for pictures in a pool of water to cover his lower legs.

That he then turned those calves into behemoths has spawned all sorts of legends, including that he resorted to silicone calf implants. The truth, according to his workout friends, is that Schwarzenegger walked into the gym one day with his arms, chest, shoulders and thighs — every body part he was proud of — covered in sweats. Only his calves were exposed.

The shame, he said, drove him to perform an unheard-of 1,400 sets of calf exercises a week. As he marked each set with an X on the wall, he said the Xs began to resemble "an invading army crushing all opposition." His calves, he wrote, came "to resemble huge boulders."

The Sport's Future

By 1968, Schwarzenegger owned every bodybuilding title in Europe and caught the eye of Joe Weider, who published a slew of U.S. muscle maga-zines and was bodybuilding's most influential voice. Weider flew Schwarzenegger to Florida for the Mr. Universe contest, watched him lose and pronounced him the sport's future.

"After the contest, I found Arnold backstage sitting next to the winner's trophy. He was petting it," Weider said. "He told me he wanted to win that title more than anything.... I asked him, 'Would you like to come to California and train with the champions?' He said, 'That's my dream.' "

Schwarzenegger stood more than 6 feet tall, a rarity in bodybuilding. He was massive, but each muscle stood in proportion to the other.

"I had never seen a human like that before," said Melvin Sokolsky, a celebrity photographer at Harper's Bazaar magazine. "I found out right away that there was a brain attached to the body."

That body was the product of relentless drive in the gym but also reflected a growing arsenal of steroids and super-protein powders formulated by a doctor, the same one shared by several top competitors.

Six of the world's greatest all-time bodybuilders interviewed by The Times acknowledged their own steroid use, saying it was impossible to build that much mass without a significant push from drugs. They said the only difference with Schwarzenegger was that he started at a young age.

"When I first saw Arnold in Europe in 1967, you just knew the kid was going to be a champion," said Bill Pearl, a three-time Mr. Universe who took years to build his body without steroids in the 1950s. "It was also obvious to me that he had been taking steroids. You don't make the night-and-day gains he did without them."

Even Weider, who all but ignored the drug issue in his magazines, said steroids accounted for 10% of Schwarzenegger's physique — an estimate considered too low by the former champions, who put the figure at 20%.

"A competitor like Arnold is interested in one thing: to win. What does he do to win? Everything he possibly can," Weider said. "To expect anything different is to be naive."

Unlike the myriad growth hormones and diuretics usedin the underground of today's bodybuilding scene, the handful of substances used in Schwarzenegger's day were easily obtained through friendly doctors.

Dianabol was passed around like Rolaids, according to the champion bodybuilders of that era. Everyone knew who was popping Winstrol to harden the muscles and injecting themselves with Deca-Durabolin to bulk up before a contest. They could tell by the puffiness of the muscles and the changes in the skin, including telltale acne.

Without steroids, they said, Schwarzenegger never would have closed the gap on Oliva, the Cuban exile thought to be invincible in the 1960s.

"Arnold wanted to beat me, and he knew he couldn't do it without drugs," Oliva said. "I don't blame him. We all did it, and it wasn't the little amount that Arnold says. We took it all year long. It gave me tremendous growth, but it's no good. I'm having health effects."

By 1970, Schwarzenegger was the darling of the Weider em-pire. Weider promoted thelegend of the Austrian Oak, while Schwarzenegger promoted Weider's barbells and protein powders and supplements.

"They were a great match, a perfect pair," said Win Paris, who owned a dozen Jack La Lanne fitness centers in California.

Weider paid Schwarzenegger's rent and gave him a car and a weekly allowance of $100 to lift weights and lie in the sun. "I was like a father to him," Weider said. "I created him."

The relationship bred re-sentment among bodybuilding's other top stars. They had to take jobs and train on little sleep. Oliva, who worked at a foundry in Chicago, believed the spoils should have gone to him. After all, he was known as the Cuban Myth, the reigning Mr. Olympia.

"I was the champ, and I had to work in 500-degree heat making sinks and toilets," he said. "I was of no promotional use to Weider. He could never come out with this baloney that he created me. I was already 'The Myth.' "

Three Epic Battles

Like Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier, Oliva and Schwarzenegger waged three epic battles for the Mr. Olympia crown. Oliva won in 1969 in Brooklyn, N.Y. Schwarzenegger won in 1970 in Columbus, Ohio, and again in 1972 in Germany.

"I knew I was a winner. I knew I was destined for great things," Schwarzenegger wrote in his 1977 autobiography. "People will say that kind of thinking is totally immodest. I agree. Modesty is not a word that applies to me in any way."

Oliva's supporters attribute his defeats to the Weider machine's control over the international committee that ran the contests and selected the judges.

Schwarzenegger's fans, for their part, say he may have been smaller than Oliva but that he was a superior poser with more defined muscles. He also was able to psych out opponents with pointed barbs that played on their insecurities.

"I will pull one trick after another on my competition to wipe him out, you know — because it's my living and I have to win," he once told an interviewer. "I will do as much as I can to make him look bad and me look good."

Mozee, the former editor of Weider's Muscle Builder who befriended Schwarzenegger while ghostwriting his training manuals and magazine columns, said he admired Schwarzenegger's drive and focus. But he could be too flip for his own good.

Mozee recalled the time Schwarzenegger posed for a photo with Mozee's godson in the mid-1970s. As the session broke up, Mozee said he heard Schwarzenegger tell the boy, "I want you to always remember this. You just took a picture with Jesus Christ." Looking back, Mozee saw a pattern. "Arnold thought he could say anything and get away with it. He had a kind of Teflon attitude."

Schwarzenegger's spokesman said the candidate could not recall the incident but did like to "push the envelope" when he was in the mood to boast.

By the mid-1970s, Schwarzenegger was making a nice living off bodybuilding, selling his training courses and holding seminars. He had a great eye for real estate and saved enough money to buy a 12-unit apartment building in Santa Monica, the first of many holdings. Some friends thought he would eventually take over Weider's flagship magazine. But Schwarzenegger told them, "Joe Weider is just a bridge for where I am going."

The course was set when the movie "Pumping Iron" came out in 1977. The film chronicled a group of top bodybuilders training and competing for the 1975 Mr. Olympia title. But the screen seemed only big enough for Schwarzenegger. He hijacked the movie with his antics and outrageous comments about muscles and sex. The movie ended with him winning a sixth straight crown and smoking a fat marijuana joint.

He retired to pursue his dream of Hollywood stardom. As he began landing roles, he started giving the cold shoulder to his old muscle buddies. Mozee said he encountered Schwarzenegger on the beach one day after he had finished shooting a movie.

"He told me, 'Gene, I can't talk to you. You're beneath me now.' He was dead serious. A week later, I was out to lunch with Joe Weider and we saw Arnold. He greeted me and said, 'Gene, you're my main man.' He was a bit of a chameleon like that."

Before landing the lead rolein "Conan the Barbarian," Schwarzenegger surprised the bodybuilding world by entering the 1980 Mr. Olympia contest in Australia, determined to prove that even after a five-year layoff, he was still the best.

Competitors said the contest was a fiasco. Several of the judges had business ties to Schwarzenegger. The affair was promoted by his good friend Paul Graham. Onstage, it became apparent that Schwarzenegger had trained hard enough to regain his upper body, but his legs lagged far behind. Most bodybuilding experts agree he should not have won.

"Arnold was a phenomenal competitor onstage, but that contest was a gift to him," said Pearl, who by then had retired from competition and was a judge. "I've never seen a Mr. Olympia contest rigged, but that one came the closest."

As Schwarzenegger the candidate makes his way around the state, the old bodybuilders hardly recognize him. It's not the body gone soft that throws them, they say, but the way he is backpedaling from the past.

Still, many of them plan to vote for him. They say his confidence is so outsized that he would not allow the state's problems to overcome him.

"When Arnold was a young bodybuilder, he once asked me if any man can achieve whatever he wants. I told him every guy has his limits," recalled former champ Rick Wayne. "Arnold told me, 'You're wrong, Rick. Any man can get what he desires provided he's willing to pay whatever price.' "
latimes.com