Source: International Herald-Tribune Pubdate: 1, Aug 1998 Contact: http://www.iht.com/ Author: Agence France-Presse TOUR CYCLIST AND TEAM DOCTOR CHARGED LILLE, France---Rodolfo Massi, a Tour de France cyclist with the Casino team, and Nicolas Terrados, the doctor for the ONCE team, were charged in court Friday night following a hearing before Judge Patrick Keil, who is heading one of the Tour drugs inquiries. Both men were detained by French police Wednesday night. They have been charged under the 1989 drug act. Massi, a member of the Casino team, was the leader in the King of the Mountains category at the time of his arrest. He faces additional charges of importing, distributing and transferring "poisonous substances." Both men were freed after the Friday hearing. In The Hague, the Dutch government said Friday that it was setting up an inquiry into the French authorities' handling of the drugs scandal in the Tour. The Dutch sports minister, Erica Terpstra, who has made public her support for the TVM team, which left the race Friday, said she wanted to determine whether the French legal authorities had acted fully within their powers. IOC Calls Drug Meeting Juan Antonio Samaranch, president of the International Olympic Committee, said Friday that he was calling a crisis meeting of the IOC executive board to discuss the use of drugs in sport, Reuters reported from London. The announcement of the meeting Aug. 20 in Lausanne comes less than a week after Samaranch provoked surprise in sports circles when he told the Spanish newspaper El Mundo that he favored an overhaul of doping controls, with athletes being allowed to use performance-enhancing drugs as long as the drugs were not harrnful. The second part of shot putter Randy Barnes' drug test was positive, the governing body of world track and field said Friday, the Associated Press reported. This sample from Barnes's out-of-competition test April, 1 confirmed the use of a banned nutritional supplement, they said. Barnes, the world-record holder and Olympic champion, must now appeal to U.S. track authorities to avoid a lifetime suspension. - --- Checked-by: "Rich O'Grady"