cep ad PAGE 4. THEHERALD, Tuesday, August 15, 1978 mI Mest: Sometimes yuyou need a ttle help from your friends as this young rider in the bareback relay finds owt Lions Park. a during Sunday’s Totem Saddle Club gymkhana at Saddle Club holds gymkhana The Totem Saddle Club held a gymkhana this weekend at Lions Park. Coming first in the senior's barrel race was Danny Muller with a time of 16.1 seconds. Rod Falkner was second with a time of 23.1 and Chris Ballattl was third in 23.8 seconds, Sherry Goodwin won the junior division of the barrel race in 19.39 seconds, The little butches champion was 'Shena Falkner in 21 seconds followed by Theresa Ballatti in 21,1 seconds and Karen Johnson in 21,6 seconds. The Pee Wee title went to Shellia Morrison with a time of 25.8 seconds followed by Curt McCarron in a time of 42.6 seconds. In the poles event Danny Muller won the senior class with a time of 23.8. Laurie Muller took second in 26.2 seconds and Inorid Kankis was third in a time of 30.9 seconds. Sherry Goodwin again took the junior title In this event. With a time of 26,8 seconds. - Theresa Ballatti won the lite britches competition in a time of 25.1 seconds with Karen Johnson right behind her ina time of 25.3 seconds and Lucy Wilson third in a time of 30 seconds. In the Pee Wees Sheilia Morrison won in a time of 34.1 seconds and Barbara McCarron was second in a time of 73.3 seconds Danny Muller won the senior scurries ina time of 11 seconds flat followed by Marlin Ballatti in 15.2 seconds and Laurie Muller in 16.2 seconds. Sherry Gcodwin again took the junior title in this event with a time of 14.1 seconds. Theresa Ballatti won the little britches class of the scurries with a time of 12.2 seconds. Lee Ballatti was second with a time of 14.5 and Roxanne McCarron third in a time of 15.3 " seconds, Sheilia Morrison tock the Game delayed again Yankees down By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mickey Rivers, who scored from first on a two-out outfield error in the fourth inning, singled home the eventual winning run in the eighth to give New York Yankees a 41 victory over Baltimore Orioles ina game delayed by power failure Monday night. Graig Nettles added a two- run, ninth-inning homer in the game that was halted for 23 minutes in Baltimore's half of the eighth when two light towers in back of home plate went out. Each contest in the fourgame series was delayed in some manner. The same towers malfunc- tioned three times in Saturday night’s game, producing 76 minutes in delays. The two other games in the set were shortened by rain after delays totalling three hours, three minutes. Gary Thomasson opened the eighth with a bloop single to right off Jim Palmer, 14- it, and was sacrificed to second before Rivers lined a single to left. ’ Rich Goasage, 8-9, relieved in the seventh when the Orioles tied the score 1-1 on Rich Dauer’s sacrifice fly and picked up the victory. New York's victory moved them to within eight games of Boston Red Sox, who lost to Milwaukee Brewers 4-3, in the AL East. In other American League action, Jim Wohlferd and Sai Bando hit solo home runs, helping Milwaukee defeat Boston. Brewers right- hander Lary Sorensen, 14-8, gave up 13 hits and stranded 10 baserunners over eight innings as Milwaukee won for only the second time in their last 190 games. TIGERS ROAR Milt May collected three singles, two walks and drove in two runs leading Detroit's 17-hit attack as the Tigers routed the Royals 11-2. Jim Sundberg’s two-run single capped a four-run fifth inning after Texas had broken up a nohit bid by Chicage's Francisco Barrios, helping the Rangers to a 4-3 victory over the’ White Sox for their fifth consecutive triumph. Gary Alexander hit two RBI singles and Sid Monge and Jim Kern combined to pitch 3 23 innings of scoreless relief, lifting Cleveland By THE ASSUCIATED PRESS NATIONAL LEAGUE East WL Pd. GBL Philadelphia 63 51 .553 — Chicago © § SW 4 Montreal 56 62 475 9 Pittsburgh 5] 6t .465 10 New Yor! 49 6) 410 144 St, Louis 48°70 407 17 San Francisco 6? 49 .685 — Los Angeles 68 50 .576 1 Cincinnati 67 51 .568 2 San Diego & 58 .500 9 ton 55 61 .474 13 Atlanta 54 63 1462 14% Monday Results Chicago 13 Atlanta 7 Pittsburgh 7 Cincinnati 4 Houston 6 SH. Louis 0 cago San Francisco at Montreal N Los Angetes at Philadelphia N Cincinnati at Pittsburgh N San Diego at New ‘York N Houston at Sf. Louis N aa Monde 8a cir Mi [HONDA Honda (asi. Sedan pee weechampionship with a time of 18.2 seconds. The flag race junior class went to Danny Muller in a time of 10.6 seconds with Laurie Muller second in a time of 26.3 and Marlin Ballatti third ina time of 30.1. Lee Ballatti took the little britches class of the event in a time of 14.3 seconds, Karen Goodwin was second in a time of 15.4 and Donna Hepner was third with a clocking of 17.7 seconds. Danny Muller took another title in the junior figure 3 competition in a time of 22.3 seconds with Marlin Ballatti second in a time of 26 seconds and Rod Falkner third in a time of 26.7 seconds. Sherry Goodwin won the Senior class. The little britches winner was Lee Balletti in a time of 26.5 seconds, Second was Roxanne McCarron in a time of 27.2 and then Karen Johnson with a time of 27.3 seconds. The pee" wee winner was Sheilia Morrison winning in a time of 32 seconds. Curt McCarron was second with a time of 39.3 and Cathy Johnson was third in 45 secomis. In the musicial tires Sherry Goodwin came in first in the senior-junior class followed by Laurie Muller and Danny Muller. The little britches class went to Lucy Wilson with Donna Hepner seconds and Rona Falkner third. In the ribbon race the junior and senior winners were team of Danny and Laurie Muller. ingrid Kankis and Sherry Goodwin are second, In the little britches class Lucy Wilson and Karen Gooswin were first followed by Hhona Falkner and Donna Heprer. The Bareback relay went to the team of Sherry Goodwin, Donna Mailer, Donna Hepner and Ingrid Kankis. Baltimore Indians to a 4-3 victory over Minnesota and snapping the Twins’ fourgame winning streak. In the National League, Dave Kingman smashed three doubles and drove in three runs, and Mike Vail added three hits and scored three runs to lead Chicago Cubs to a 18-7 victory over AMERICAN LEAGUE - East WL Pd, GBL Boston .748 62 — New York 66 51 564 G Detroit é4 51 557 9 Milwaukee 63 52 $49 10 Baltimore 63 54 538 11 Clevetand 53 63 .dS7 2012 T 4670 7 2 Kansas City 63°52 548 — California 65 55 $42 Vv Oakland 61 60 504 5 Texas 3857 «4.504 5 Minnesota 51 66 .436 13 Chicago a7 69 05 16¥2 Seaitle 44°75 .370 21 AAlweukee 4 Boston “9 New York 4 Baltimore Cleveland 4 Minnesota 3 Minnesota at Cleveland Karsas City at Detroit N Ciicato at Texas N Boston at California N New York at Oakland N Baltimore at Seattle N z All the HONDAS are here. Test drivea Honda today at TERRACE HONDA SALES 49t Hwy, 16 Terrace, B.C. VaG 1La 638-8171 Dealer Licence Number 020664 Atlanta Braves. The Braves scored four runs in’ the third on suc- cessive home runs by Gary Matthews, Jeff Burroughs and Bob Horner. The assault fell one short of the major league: record of four by Milwaukee Braves in the NL in 1961 and tied by Cleveland in the American League in 1963 and Minnesota in 1964. | Dave Parker drove in three rung and Omar Moreno scored three to lead Pitt- sburgh’ Pirates to a 7-4 victory over Cincinnat! Reds while Art Howe drove in three runs with a solo homer and a two-run single to back the four-hit pitching of Tom Dixon as Houston Astros posted a 6-0 victory over St. Louls Cardinals. ORTESASU, Cuba (AP) — U.S. marathon swimmer Diana Nyad was more than 16 kilometres behind schedule in turbulent water Monday and her adviser said he was “gravely concerned” she-might not complete her 165-kilometres swim to the Florida Keys from Cuba. “The swim isn't going its best,"" Ken Gunderson, the - adviser, said from a team base in Key West after Ms. Nyad finished more than ane ‘quarter of her swim. Gunderson said the swimmer faced increasingly higher waves as she tried to complete the swim across © the Straits of Florida. - Ms. Nyad is trying to establish a record for the longest distance ever swum in open water. Gunderson said he had a report at 1:40 p.m. EDT that placed Ms, Nyad, 28, and the ' flotilla of boats following her self-propelled shark cage B0 kilometres north of Bahia Honda. That coastal town is a few kilometres west of the Ortejaso beach, where Ms. Nyad started her swim with a brave smile at 2:05 p.m. Sunday. The original course laid out for Ms. Nyad traced 165 kilometres from the for- thern Cuban coast to the middle Florida Keys, north of Key West, She thought she would need 60 hours of swimming to cover the course. - BEGINS CROSSING Another swimmer, Englishborn ‘Stella Taylor, set out Monday on a 160- : kilometre swim from Bimini in the Bahama Islands across the Gulf Stream, which flows through the straits, to Florida. She was “about 400 kilometres nor- May not make distance | Grave concern for swimm theast of Ms. Nyad. © As Ms. Nyad . stroked through troubled waters, reporters and. television teams irying to cover the feat struggled with problems of their own. One press boat, the Proud Mary, started taking on water carly Monday, the U.S. Coast Guard said. A guard helicopter rushed an auxiliary pump out to it and that was enough to keep the *water bailed out, a coast guard official said. The media also struggled with radio communication problems that. kept many reporters from calling in stories. : The official open water record is 96 kilometres across Lake Michigan by er E 'yptian ‘Abo-Heif, who "made the swim in34 hours in 1963. : Walter. Poenisch, a 6 ‘ year-old U.S. baker and stunt swimmer, said he completed the Cuba-to- Florida swim July 13. But his claim was not accepted because so independent observer accompanied the. swim. Quebec player advances in Canadian Open tennis RONTO (CP) — Rejean Genois of Quebec City, playing in‘ his 28th con- secutive week of tournament competition, used his strong serve to defeat Robin Drysdale of Britain 6-4, 6-0 Monday in a first-round match at the $210,000 Canadian Open tennis championships. The victory helped redeem the 25-year-old Canadian after he Jost—in the round of ’ 16 at the Canadian national championships in Ottawa last week. ' In another first-round men's singles match Mon- day, fourthseeded Raul Ramirez of Mexico beat Harry Fritz of Toronto 6-3, 6- 3. Fritz is the Canadian na- tional champion. . In first-round women’s singles play, seventh-seeded > Laura DuPont of the United States downed Sharon Walsh of the U.S. 6-1, 4-6, 7-5; Kym Ruddell of Australia defeated Frederique Thibault of France 1-6, 7-5, 6- 4 and Jeanne Duvall of the U.S, beat Kathy Kuykendall, also of the U.S., 6-0, 7-6. Genois has been playing in the southern U.S. for the last Woman tennis player takes swipe at tourney organizers TORONTO (CP) — Marjorie Blackwood of Ottawa, Canada's national ‘ women’s champlon, made an early exit from the Canadian Open tennis championships Monday and took a swipe at tournament organizers on the way out. ; Blackwood, who beat Lise . Senn of Toronto 7-5, 6-4 for the national women’s litle in a match that ended about midafternoon in Ottawa on Sunday, was scheduled for an early centre-court match against Michele Tyler of Britain on Monday. Blackwood, 21, won the first set 6-4 but then tired noticeably in the final two sets and dropped them 6-1, 6- 3. . : Following the match, she eriticized tournament organizers for scheduling her on the opening day of the tournament, claiming she should have had a day off and been given a Tuesday match. She found out after her Ot- tawa victory that she had an early match here, and arrived in Toronto at 2 a.m. “{ had trouble con- centrating, and the main reason was the scheduling,” Blackwood said. ‘How could they have done such a stupid thing.” “{ can play against Michele, and [ proved it in the first set,” she said. “But then itall caught up with me later, all because pf the scheduling. “7 i re RT alae ta Fates? Biol Potok WOF eae Lo . to teach new bowlers: individual or teams” ay to help old bowlers improve their game 1-5 p.fit, & 7-11 p.m. ao , (Bowling alley open for casual ve bowling or lessons.} Phone 635-6911 or Phone 635-9406 for more informaticn A) Het an a TE Sai OPER Ee a4 g} BIE TS at ete, eT Bee oe yan CGR RIA FN PR eRe eh ean four months, mostly on the Grand Prix and satellite cir- cuits, but returned to Ot- tawa's tournament in an attempt to secure a national ranking. His play in the US. helped improve his world ranking to 89th. “| went back to Olfawa go get a ranking, and if they rank me, I'd be i¢th-best in Canada and eth in the world,” Genois joked after his morning match. SERVED POORLY! Genois's victory over Drysdale was due in part to poor serving by the British player. With the score tied 3- 3 in the opening set, Drysdale doublefaulted to give the Canadian the ad- vantage he needed for the first-set win. In the opening game of the Sports NAMED TOP PLAYER NEW YORK (AP) — Out- fielder Jim Rice of Boston Red Sox was named the American League player of the week Monday by league president Lee MacPhail. Rice went 16 for 30 for a 533 average with 10 RBIs and six runs scored. He had a pair of doubles, a triple and three ‘ home runs for 29 total bases anda slugging percentage of i067, BUYS CARIBOUS ATLANTA (AP) — An At- lanta group announced the purchase Monday of the Colorado Caribous of the North American Soccer League. The team will be called the Atlanta Chiefs and begin NASL play in the 1979 - season. The sale is subject to agreement of the league. The sale price was not disclosed. —_ secord set, Drysdale again double-faulted on break point, Genois will meet top-. seeded Eddie Dibbs of the US. in the next round. “] didn't hit many win- ners, but 1 didn’t ‘have to,” . Genois said. ‘I just played a cautious game and let him make the mistakes.” Genois is finally at the point in his career where tennis is making him money. “T'l) make at least $1,500 here this week, and if every tournament was like this one, 1 wouldn't have any problems.” Genola will take a week off after his tournament, then go to Forest Hills for the U.S. Open, where he received an automatic exemption because of his current world ranking, briefs The Caribous were §-22 last season and finished last in their division of the 24-team league, . JOINS STAMPS CALGARY (CP) — Bernie Morrison, 23, a six-foot, two- inch, 220-pound linebacker from University of Manitoba, has joined Calgary Stampeders of the Canadian Footbal] League on a five-day trial. The Winnipeg native was released earlier by Winnipeg Blue Bombers of the Western Conference. ANNOUNCE PLAY DATE MONTREAL (CP) — The 1979 Canadian tournament on the Ladies Professional Golf Association tour will be played July 23-23 at the Richelieu Valley Golf Clubin nearby Ste, Julie, it was anngunced Monday. Enjoy the world of sensual massage... Po *Hot 24 hours «Cross Link Poly-tub © Plugs into any 110V On... outdoors! as. * Pre-plumbed. No house or plumbing alterations required. , * 100% Portable * Completely preplumbed ’ * 72 Jets for total massage * No shipping or assembly charges to northern points. Write or phone collect 420 Wost Gth Ave. Vancouver, B.C, 872-8541 Dealer inquiries invited