FINISHES | "THIRD BRISBANE, Australia (Reuter) — Two-time Olympic champion Lasse Viren of Finland finished ‘aut of-the first three in a ‘9,000-metre race at an _tpternational track and -field meet Sunday. Viren kept u with the leaders : final stages but then -faded. mon - of Ireland :-won in. -eight’ minutes 4.6 seconds, with Jos Her- mans of the Netherlands - pecond in 8:06.4 and Irwin Wagner of Austria third A 8:06,8. : CHAM- “STOCKHOLM (Reuter) — Svend Pri of Denmark defeated . countryman 3 "Sports Shorts Flemming Delfs 15-3, 15-8 Sunday to win the men’s . singles title at the Swedish Open badminton championships, In the women’s singles final, Lene, Koeppen of Den- mark heat Jane Webster of England 11-5, 11-2. WINS TITLE AUCKLAND, Zealand (Reuter) = New Eighteen-year-old -Eliot | Teltscher of the United States won the men’s singles title in the New Zealand Open tennis championships . Sunday, beating Onny ‘Parun of New Zealand ¢ 6-3, 74, 6-1. The women’s litle was won by Helena Anliot of Sweden who beat Marilyn Teseh of Australia 6-3, & NAMED COACH BLACKSBURG,” (AP) — Bill Dooley, Va, who gulded North Carolina to. three Atlantic Coast - HEAD | Conference titles and six’ bow] games in the last1l ears, was . named nday as head football coach sand director at Virginia Tech. AMERICAN WINS . Zealand New . athletic American Ron Tripp beat Petty Seite! some of the- worl speed car: drivers Sunday ond won the: midget speedway championships - Western . greedway. Tri Path lead for good With race. Super Bowl XII. NEW ORLEANS (AP) _— Eat the fun begin. . The week-long flood of interviews, parties and pre-game hoopla that are as.much a Super Bowl football tradition as the gilver trophy that goes to tha winner start today with the arrival of Dallas Cowboys and Denver Broncos, ’ Every detail— important and irrelevant — wilt } recor: @& massive media entourage that chronic eee hoe & players’ shoe sizes before the National Football Lea ue cham- fecided for 2 ine under the Super Bowl format next Sunday. For-the first time, it will be. contested in- doors—at the Superdome, where’ some 75,000 spectators and a television audience ex- pected to reach 69 million Will watch the teams which feature explosive effences and awesome efences. with equally Do cknames, or the first time, reporters will have some be Killer Be JHE CANADIAN Coach - Johnny. Wilson figures his Pittsburgh Penguins had it all over Los Angeles Kings on Saturday night—even ‘th it took a goal by Jean a nara with 38 seconds left lo play to lift Ra Penguins into a 3-3 ational n Hockey League ny was a good tie in t'we came back to tle ‘them, , but I'realiy thought ‘let them off the hook,”’ anid ‘Wilson after Pronovost's goal, with hetminder Denis’ Herron on the bench in favor of rs oe eave helped e Pe save face in Bile Area 13,021 fans at the We didn’ have that killer. ingtinet, to keep ete a: “charges had into a 2-0 lead on EY rookie Peter Lee a veteran: ~ Pete 1, ‘Se sa _ SATURDAY "International 7 Tractor-Chel abinsk 6 pasts OHA. Sr. 5 ‘colorado 3NY Rangers by _lelanders 5 Cleveland 3 : 4 4Toronto 6 Vancouver 4 ‘Pittsburgh. 3. Los "WHA -inlapots 2 Houston 1. New. “Wngland § Cin- a 3 oes, A atlonals 6 ‘er Haven 3 Hampton fs "eee. 4 Rochester 4 “Nova ota | 5 Maine 2 Della’ * Fort Worth 1. Salt Lake 2h mercy form of | access . to the player workouts and. to e game officials. This latest move was in- stituted in an apparent effort. to prevent: either . team from hiding injuries and to present the public with clearer explanations of any controversial made by the men shirts. . ‘Cowboys’ Doomsday TI defence, led by Harvey Martin and Too Tall Jones, will go the task of stopping the Denver offence run by former Dallas quar- terback Craig Morton. To Denver’s Orange Crush area will go the chore dealing with the of rushing star Tony Dorsett’ and uarterback er taubach’s drive to give his Cowboys their secon NFL title here. Dallas, which will be its fourth Si Bowl appearance, a5 won it once—at New Orleans Np pea when they ine Miami phins Pi Bey be shooting for another crown against a team which is making the first " rs ota Mahovlich—both ob- tained in a recent trade. with Montreal Canadiens for Pierre Larouche—but: missed several excellent scoring opportunites‘ be- fore falling bebind 3-2 wit five minutes. left ta a Rad two Los Angeles Bonguns resulted from the position, In’ other ames, Chicago Black Hawks and St. Louis Blues skated to a 0-) draw, Bos- ton Bruins - defeated Minnesota North Stars 3- 1, New York Islanders beat Cleveland Barons 5 3, Colorado Rockies . downed New: Rangers 3- he entale Sabres tied hington Capitals 4-4 and’ Toronto Maple Leafs beat Van- couver Canucks 6-4," SETS UP TWO At Pittsburgh, Dave. Taylor set up both Los York Weekend ' Hockey International Port Huron 4 Grand Rapids 3 inaw 6 Toledo 4 Kalamazoo 5 Flint 3 ; Muskegon 5 Milwaukee Ontario Senior - Whitby 6 Mississauga 3 Orillia 6 Thunder Bay 3 Central Senior = : -Stéinbach 6 Brandon 4 Western International Cranbrook 5 Spokane 1 Kimberley 11. Ontario Major Peterboroug! Ste. Marie 5: Ottawa 6 Niagara Falls 4 . . ; Ontario Provincial Hill 1° Western Canada. Victoria 6 Lethbridge 38 ent: . peattle 5 New minster Manitoba Junior _ Portage 6 Thompson 3 St. James 9 Dauphin 6 Monarchs B&B Kenora a ope ers or receivers. orton d. fensive line will have to with | the fourth quarter of uins losing the puck - e Kings scoring ; ’ face-off ‘circle. “Kin elson 2 - 8 Sault . Wexford 5 Richmond championship Rawr of Poy Qs 7 The Broncos reached the climactic NFL - season Pittsburgh an oan in the American Football Conference playoffs. ‘while the Cowboys earned their travel ex- penses by scoring playoff victories over cago and Minnes Dallas Ted the NFL in total defence while its offence produced 42 touchdowns and X45 points— both tops in the - ational Football -Con- ference. The Broncos were third-best Conference but did not have a player among the and. . of- contend .. Doomsday II pass rush which _ produced’ 53 quarterback sacks and permitted 26 touchdowns . all season. Staubach and ny will be. facin cing an: ange Crush whi contained Pittsburgh and Oakland, the winners ‘of the last three NFL titles. instinct missing’ Augele oals- in the corner to take osseasion of the puck and pass to ‘Tom Williams who’ beat ‘Herron. | - On the second | goal, Taylor carried: puck down the right side. and. paged to Marcel Dionne; screened. shot from the “On those two goals, we. had possesgion and just gave ‘it away,” ‘Wilson said. “It -was- careless,”? Stemkowski put - the’ period when he drove a rebound: past Goaltender Ton Esposito and combined to kick out 49. shots, several from close range, as the Hawks and- to a the Blues skated scoreless tie before a crowd of 12,295 at the Saskatchewan Juntor Weyburn 5. Prince ‘Saskatoon 4 Yorkton: 3. Esteven 4 ‘Humboldt $ . - Alberta Junior: Calgary 6 St. Albert. 4. - Edmonton 6 Taber a "BC, Junior - .Nanaimo.11. Vernon 3 ‘Penticton’ $15. *' Revelstoke 3 Fatereolegiate ‘Concordia 5 Alberta ® " (Coneordia wins ms cham jonship) .- U.S. College Vermont 4 fale 3. - Cornell 5 Providence 5 Oswego State 7 Buffalo St. Nottheastern- 10°. ate 2 an esta. 4. Notre . Dame ; Merrimack, .10 Holy Cross 2 > Cath “Teron e Exnibidon 1 Laval. 4. gs best — three a laps to go in the 30-lap .. od, He fe at - season. the © : Just the. second period to break a ahead at 14:57 of: 1-1 te and ruin the North _ before -. Bourne, E the eu attracte _ 17,607 ‘to the -Capital ehetesd PM ‘initoba 2. Concordia Tournament . ume of the . ae Pa Terrace Pee Wees & Kitimat Peewee Reps playing Hockey at Terrace Friday night. Kitimat won 7 to 5. U.S. win first annual Can-Am Boul throw and:said to myself my you can get a better . By TAN MacLAINE - ‘TAMPA, Fla, (CP). — Bob Cameron decided to switch balls to open. the Can- Am Bow! college football game Sunday at Tampa tadium. and was .asking himself later why he waited so Jong to make the change. With he and. ‘his Canadian . team-mates down 22-0 at the tine to @ evi dies waeeni.s Bins | Checkerdome, . the 5 Blues largest turnout; of. the. Tony 90 recorded ‘hia 6lgt' career shutout.’ and: "Hocking 21 ha ery oc F) “while Myrestopped 25 drives. It was the pecond scoreless deadlock the. NHL Bob. Schmautz’s short- handed: goal: keyed the Bruins to their: win over “North: Stars. - at Bloomington. ‘Schmautz scored on a breakaway just before the end of the Stars hopes for a victory their’ largest | crowd in 11. NHL - seapons—15,873. SCORES TWIck ; Defencenian - Pagel eased |, BeCOR taf carried the Islanders . Baron. at Peisndate. The Islan- gers, with, oais from Bob Westfall and Bob ie led:5-1 at © of the middle pe- mi Gardner’ B 28th goal of the season in the second period. g Rockies a lead they didn’t ' relinquish as they broke a o ‘nine-game winless streak with a vietory over the ; Rangers. . Abbotsford 4 Langley 2 Ric Seiling scored with 4:51 left to play to. lift Buffalo into a tie with the | improvin iF Capitals, who a Forowd of Centre. Washington had taken the lead on Guy Charron’s goal at 13:42 of ‘ the third perod, their first “... advantage since early in Bt. Mary’s % Brandon 0 the game. - Dave Williams scored. * with 4:26 left to play to” - break a 4-4 tie and Geo 6 = Ferguson.. added -an surance’ goal: 29 seconds. later to ave the Leafs a. oo hardfought win . over Vancouver. | The late rally ended an utstary lormance - petminder yaa Maile o, who this team in. wall 6 saves. - ball Bat setback | in Denis ave the . egame the highly-regarded United States, the Acadia warterback used the erivan ball to generate one . coring ive -and Canadian squad k rocking on the door again in the closing minutes. “¥ found with the smaller ball I could throw it, where the Canadian was slippery,"’ Cameron said fol owing a the al international game.\on gd. rain- bow | aoddened Tampa be: 4 ‘Stadium field. “down jcanaian ine own by Bruce Wilkins. with 3:06 _Jeft in the ganie came on Va oné-yard run after ‘Cameron, who started the . eight-play drive on ‘Canata’s 40 yard stripe ‘set it up with a 16-yard run. to th . one. The = vain touted American squad, rated two-touchdown favorites going into the game, ran up an impressive net total 438 yards on offence but, was continually stopped short of the Canadian goal line. They were held to a 5-0 lead at halftime on a 23- 0} a lin: "BG STYLE 3g. Aa : yard field goal by. Bruce Allen. and two singles from Mike Deutsch. The American squad struck for 10 quick points midway through the third quarter. Allen connected " ona 25-yard field goal at 8:13, On the ensuing play from scrimmage at the Canadian 35, defensive back Brenard Wilson latched on to a Cmaeron pass at the sidelines and raced 44 yards for the first American TD. BONE THE GOAT | Western Ontario * quarterback Jamie Bone was the goat on: the second major score by: the Americans when the ppery ‘ot away from hin dec in the Canadian end of the field and floated into Ben Zambiasi’s hands. The U.S. linebacker romped . untouched 10 yards for’ ‘the score, That's when Cameron decided to play the rest of game with the rene American: ball. “Once the Canadian ‘ wel, thing on put a on it,” he oid. te slipped “I was watching them * out of my hand .. the there was no way the could throw that muc better than us. So I went with their ball and had a lot mare success.’ oo Acameron, the : . Canadian Tniereellegiate Athletic Union’s most layer in 1977, was not pleased with his performance on the day, although things seemed to jell in the Canadian offensive backfield once switched balls. valuable reasons for the switch. “The size, NO. 4. It’s smaller ..: and more pointed at the end. That your hand around it. “The other thing is the | textur (of the leather), ° :The nipples (grain) on’ — _ the American abil stick - dian’ ‘ balls ° smoother.’”’ While Cameron, Bone out alot more, The Cana- lot . 7 * and the other members of - the Canadian offence : were trying to put their > game together tngide * ebacker John Priestner of - Western a e said there were two . Ontario was leading‘:a':? stubbornCanadian defence that didn't allow one offensive TD on the scoreboard. Canada & Cuba Gitbe training camp in Canadian winter tating cam has in Cuba for some years, but it now is being HAVANA (Reuter) .— Canada and Cuba signed an agreement Saturday for greater co-0 ation in amateur athletics Under the arrangement, about 100 Cuban athletes will be going to Canada to train this year. and some of Canada’s best amateur athletes will go to a agreement, athletes will ‘9 to Cuba to compete - . expanded. Under the new - Canadian . several ; events, including fencing, . munasties and women's : sketball. 77