2 AP oe eee satiny scet Spoke pie de oe. pope gccip me, oe aaa * with a lew SAN Canadian scullers picked up ‘itwo gold and three silver medals Sunday at the Pan- American Games. Canadians were: the Winners in both the double sculls and paira without cox and got thelr silvera.in:the ° eights with cox, four-care with cox and single sculls, . The pairs without cox crew. of Brian Dick and Tim Storm of St. Catharines, Ont., finished in 6:92.33 to beat out the secondplace United States crew and the Cubans ~ American swimmer “SAN JUAN (CP) — American awimmer Mary gher broke the third Mea - world record of the Pan- American Games swimming meet Saturday while Gord Singleton of Niagara Falls, Ont., won his second cycling gold medal and the U.S. and Canada won two each in women’s gymnastica. Monica Goermann of Winnipeg golds Thursday as individual allround champion and a member of the firat-place Canadian ‘team, Picked up a JUAN: (CP) —. , Who had won two | who picked up the bronze. Pat Walter and Bruce Ford of Victoria were the double sculls winners, with a time of 6:03.95, The United States and Cuba were second and third in the sculls event as well. .-Mexico got a big gold- silver sweep in the 50 Kilometre walking race when world. record holder Raul Gonzales set a games’ mark of four houra, 16 minutes, 15,05 seconds. The 27-year- old Mexican led all the way, in boiling hot weather, to third on the uneven bars, a silver in floor exercises and a bronze on the balance beam. Sherry Hawco of Cam- bridge, Ont., the all-round bronze medalist, took top honors on the beam and Elli Schlegel of Toronto won two silvers on the side horse and uneven bars. The American winners were Jackie Cassello on the bars and Jeanine Creek in floor exercises. Singleton, who won the beter the old mark set in 1971 by Larry Young of the United States. Mexico also picked up the silver with Martin Bermudez finishing behind Gonzales. Marco Evoniuk of the United States picked up the bronze. Although the early-day results didn’t produce much gold for the U.S. they are ctill well ahead of the pack, with Cuba still second and Canada third, United States’ oarsmen did pick up one gold with victory in the eights without cox. 1, 000-metre time trial Wednesday, outdvelled Juan Perez of Cuba in the final of the cycling sprint. Chile, which had eliminated Canada in the first round of the 4,000-metre team pursuit, went on to win the event for its first gold medal of the Games. Meagher, 14, of Louisville, Ky., won the 200-metre butterfly in two minutes 9.77 seconds, a tenth of a second faster than the former mark which was shared by her team-mate Tracy Caulkins They also got a go‘d in the . equestrian dressage event with Hilda Gurney on Keen scoring 1,357 polnts. The second place crew in the elghts from Vancouver was made up of Greg Hood, David Orr, Robin Cather- wall, Dave Wilkinson, Rob Hartwickson, Marius Felix, Fred Withers and John Richardson. Cuba won the bronze. . Phil Monckton, a member of the Ridley Grads, was second in the single sculls, beaten out by Roberto Ibarra and Andrea Pollack of East Germany. She finished far ahead of another American, Karine Miller, who was timed in 2:15.05. Nancy Garaplek of Halifax took the bronze, her fifth medal of the Games, in 2:16.77 and Kelly Albright of Toronto’ was fourth in 2:17 AB, In the closest finish of the swimming program, Bob Placak of the U.S. nipped Commonwealth Games champion Dan Thompson of Toronto by a 50th of a second of Argentina who finished In 6:39.5. The‘. Canadian’s finishing time was 6:42.04. United States sculler Jim Dietz was third, It was the Hamilton Leander. Boat Club that oked up the silver in the ‘our with cox, The crew of Bob Cher- winski, Doug Turton, Mel LaForme, Carl Zintel and cox Miles Cohen finished in 6:46.79, behind the winning Cuban crew who stroked to the winin 6:43.41, The United Statea was third, breaks third record in the men’s 100 butterfly. The times were 55.54 for Placak and 55.56 for Thompson, 23, a University of Toronto physical education student. Clay Evans of Vancouver was the bronze medalist with a time of 56.63, The victories by Meagher and Placak, plus . com- fortable wins by the U.S. 4x100 freestyle relay team and by Brian Goodell in the 1,500 freestyle, gave the Americans 24 golds in 25 swimming events, ~ Track and field was chaotic SAN JUAN, (CP) — The ° Opening of the track and field program at the Pan- _ American Games went about as. expected — _ complete chaos. The. entire program Saturday started and ended in confusion both on the field end in the stands where fang invaded the ‘VIP section. Sending the VIPs scurrying to the already. beleagured press = area, - And veteran Canadian diseus hurler Carmen Tonesco of St, Brimo, Que., ‘wept uncontrollably after | SAN JUAN (CP) '—-Cuba ind id Cahacitdomtiated ‘tHe’ * fliele-at* WHE “Pan- pis ean Games Sunday ’ and Terry Hadlow of Ottawa won Canada's first lifting gold while the — United States had a big day in track and field, widening ite lead in the. over-all gold medal standings. After 150 events, the U.S. had won 72 and Cuba 43. Canada was a distant third with 17 golds to nine for Argentina, six for Brazil, two for Mexico and one for Chile. Hadlow, 4 22-year-old physical education student, ‘ won his gold in the snatch competition of the light heavyweight class and took silvers in the jerk and total litt, He was the first non- Cuban to win one of the 24 golds awarded sq far in | tlifting. Canada’s only track medal was a bronze earned by Angela Taylor of Toronto in the women’s 100 metres. Evelyn Ashford of the U.S. won the event in 11.07 seconds, followed by team- mate Brenda Moorehead in 11.11 and Taylor in 11.36. “Phil Olsen of Nanaimo, B.C., one of the favorites in the men’s javelin, finished a disappointing fourth behind Tumcan Atwood of the U.S. and Cubans Antonio Gon- gales and Raul Pupo. At- wood's winning toss travelled 64.16 . metres. Olsen's best was 76,28, Diane Jones-Konihowski of Edmonton and Jill Ross of London, Ont., tuning up for today’s pentathlon, finished fourth and sixth in the women's long jump, won by American Kathy McMillan of 6.48 metres, Jones-Konihowski cleared 6.10 and Ross managed 5.83. Desplte the absence of American champion Edwin Moses, the U.S. won the 400 hurdles as James Walker covered the distance Ln 49.66, fan’ Newhouse of Edmonton was fifth in 51,62, missing the bronze by twotentha of a second, Americans Heary Morsh and Bill McCullough finirhed one second apart in the 1,000 steeplechase with reg Du- halme placing fifth in nine her event ended in the early morning hours. Already upset after arriving at the stadium well . before her event was scheduled to start around 6 p.m. and finding the throwers cage hadn't been set up, she was disqualified her final three throws of six attempts and had to settle for third place behind two Cubans — Carmen Romero and Maria Betancourt. Tonesco’s best throw of the night — 57.14 metres — was _ well off her personal best. Romero took the gold with a throw of 60.58 and Betan- minutes 2.0 seconds, winning time; was 8: 43.6, SATURDAY BASEBALL. : Canada defeated a by Puerto Rico. ; BASKETBALL Canada lost 91-75 to- Puerto Rico in. men’s division. Canada qualified for final round, ‘ BOXING Flyweight: Ian Clyde, Ga- tineau, Que., oultpointed Jorge Moran, Ecuador. Middlewelght: Lawrence Rolfe, Vancouver, stopped at 2:35 of second round by Jose Molina, Puerto Rico. CYCLING . Sprint: Gord Singleton, Niagara Falls, Ont., won gold medal. DIVING Men’a platform: Ken Arm- strong, Ingersoll, Ont., finished fourth in final. FIELD HOCKEY Canada defeated Barbados #1, GYMNASTICS: Women Balance beam: Sherry Haweo, Cambridge, Ont., “won gold: Monica Goer- mann, bronze. Aide horse: Elfie Schlegel, Toronto, won silver. Uneven bara: Goermann won gold; Schlegel won silver, Floor exercises; mann won silver, ROLLER SKATING Artistic pairs: Lori Beal, Toronto, and Robert Dalgliesh, Burlington, Ont., won bronze; Sherrle Mc- Cumber and David Carley, Hamilton, finished fourth. Women’s artistic dance: Sylvia Gingras, Granby, Que., won bronze. SOFTBALL Canada defeated Dominican Republic 2-1 and Bermuda 6-0 In women's division. SHOOTING Individual skeet: George Leary, Gormley, Ont., won bronze, ‘Team centre-fire pistol: Canada won allver. SWIMMING Men‘s 100-metre butterfly: Dan Thompson, won allyer; Clay Evans, Vancouver, won bronze. Winnipeg, won Goer- court the second-place silver with a distance of 60.44, Jean Raul Baert of Montreal, coach of the Canadian throwing team here, blamed the organ- ization for the chaotic condi-. tions that had veteran track writers shaking their heads in amazement that a meet of this supposed calibre could be so mismanaged. “IE they get the 1982 , games,.-you. can bet I’m golng to be elsewhere,''said one American writer. “I've been at these meets for 15 years and can’t recall so much confusion,” Men's 1,500 metres: Peter | + Semite’ Phinite-Clairé; Qe, on, finishéd fourth in final; Al finenet ot Sudbury, finished eighth. Women’s freestyle relay: Canada (Gail Amundrud, Ottawa Carol Kiimpel, "Toronto, Anne Jardin, Pointe Claire, Que., Wendy Quirk, Ed- " monton) won silver, « Women's 200-metre but- terfly: ‘Nancy Garapick, . Halifax, won bronze; Kelly Albright, Toronto, finished fourth. Women’s freestyle: Barb Shockey, Saskatoon, third over-all in heats, 9:07.59, qualified; Leslie Brafield, Mis- sissauga, Ont., fourth, 8:07.94, qualified, TENNIS Women’s singles Wendy Barlow, Victoria, def, Aluminada Con- cepecion, Cuba, 7-5, 3-6, 62, Nicole Marois, Quebec City, lost 7-5, 6-1 to Maria Llamas, Mexico. TRACK Men's 14) metres: Desai Williams, Toronto, eliminated in seml-finala, second in heat, 10.44. Men's shot: Bishop Dolegiewicz, Toronto, won silver medal; Bruno Pauletto, Sept-lies, Que., won bronze. ' Men's 800 metres: Doug Wournell, Calgary, third in heat, 1:5L7, qualified~ for semifinals, Women’s Angela Taylor, Toronto, third over-all In semi-finals, ‘11.26, quallfied for final; won heat, 11.42, 4x100-metre 800-meire . 100 metres:. Baert said to spend thousands of dollars on an ‘ athlete then-to have them compete in the undesireable conditions that greeted them Saturday, is utterly in- comprehensible. It is not good for the athletes, making them wait so long for an event, said the French-born Baert, who is responsible for grooming Canadian discus and shot putt throwers. “Our girls had to warm up three tlmes before they ‘started to compete.” around and stretch, ‘It Baert admitted that the _ wasn't very pleasant.” . Women’s 4 it pretren:, Men’s 4x100-medley relay: Gert: Bitch! wun Canada won silvern: ! bronze. Tateg | ato, we 7 ENNIS Women's discus: Carmen Men's singles Ionesco, Montreal, won Robert Bettauer, Van- bronze, + eouver, def. Vavio Miondet, VOLLEYBALL Venezucla, 6%, 36, 74. Canada defeated ; v Ja 30 Josef Brabenac Jr,, Van- enezuela 2. couver, and Bettauer def. WATER POLO Roberto Saad and Guillermo . Canada lost to Cuba 6-3. orte, Argentina, 6-1, 6-2, WEIGHTLIFTING TRACK AND FIELD Light middleweight: Eric Rogers, Edmonton, won silver in jerk. SUNDAY BASEBALL Canada lost $8 to Cuba. ROWING Double sculls: Pat Walter and Bruce Ford, Victoria, won gold medal, Pairs without cox: Brian Dick and Tim Storm, St. Catharines, Ont., won gold, Coxed fours: Bob Cher- winski, Doug Turton, Mel LaForme, Carl Zintel and Miles Cohen, ail Hamiton, won silver, Single sculls: Phil Mon- ckton, St. Catharines, won silyer, Eights: Greg Hood, David Orr, Robin Catherwall, Dave Wilkinson, Rob Hart- wickson, Mariua Felix, Fred Withers, John Richardson, al] Vancouver, won silver. SWIMMING Women's 100-metre freestyle: Gail Amunrud, Ottawa, won bronze; Anne Jardin, Pointe Claire, Que., finished fourth. Men’s 100-metre freestyle: Bill Sawchuk, Thunder Bay, Ont., finished fourth in final: Peter Szmidt, Pointe Claire, seventh. PanAm games competition was the first major meet of the year for Ionesco and that she hadn't been under any preaure until this meet. “They played around with us,” said shot putter Bruno Pauletto af Sept. Hes, Que... “They made us wait, they «made us draw number, they . made us do all ‘kinds of things. co “Then they wanted us to sit down while we waited, We weren't supposed to move even If we wanted to walk How Canada did at Pan- Am games. The Men's 40-metre hurdles: Ian Newhouse, Edmonton, finished fifth in final, Women's 100 metres: Angela Taylor, Toronto, won bronze. ; VOLLEYBALL - Canada defeated Brazil 3-1 in men’s division. WATER POLO Canada defeated Brazi) 7- 5. SYNCHRONIZED SWIM- MING Team: Calgary Aguabelles (Janet Arnold, Kim Birnie, Sharon’ Ham- brook Beth Irwin, Raphaela Jablonca, Kelly Kryczka, Leslie Ringrose, Helen Vanderburg) ‘Add SWIMMING Women’s 800 metres: Barbara, Shockey, Saskatoon, won bronze; Leslie Brafield, Mis- sissauga, Ont., finished fourth, BASKETBALL Canada lost 97-76 to U.S. in men’s division. Add TRACK AND FIELD Women'a 800 metres: Ann- Mackie Morelli, Vancouver, qualified for final with secondfastest time in seml- — finals, 2:06.2; Brit McRoberts, Victéria, seventh, 2:00.2, qualified, If you don’t keep an eye on your figure neither will anybc.-*, else! At the Diet Center, we LOSE 17TO 25 POUNDS IN JUST 6 WEEKS © AND TEACH YOU HOW TO STAY SLIM FOR THE REST OF YOUR LIFE ons KT THE LOS, q G8 Office hours: 9-1 Mon.-Fri. azelle Ave. After hours call Dolores - 635-3832 will help you Canadian swimmers qualified for finals in three events. Bill Sawehuck of Thunder Bay was fourth in the over- all heats of the men’s 100- metre freeslyle while Peter Samidt, Pointe Claire, Que., was = eighth. The Canadian men’s 4x100- metre relay team finished first in over-all heats with a time of 9:58.03, ~ Gail Amundrud of Van- couver was third in the women's 100-metre freestyle The Canadian foursome of Carol Kilmpel of Toronto, Anne Jardin of Pointe Claire,’ Que. and Gail Amundrud and Wendy Quick of Ed-, monton was second in relay but there was ‘fo Canadian medal in the 1,500. A 1-2 finish in the,10,000 metres by Rodolfo “Gomez and Enrique Aquino that pushed U.S. veteran Frank Shorter into third place was the highlight of the first day of track and field. Canada’s best performace was a silver and bronze in the men’s shot put, won by . Dave Laut of the U.S, witha heave of 20.22 metres. Bishop Dolegiewicz of Toronto was second with 19.67, followed by Bruno Pauletto of Sept-Iles, Que., with. 19.61. In a competition that lasted until midnight, Carmen Ionesco of Montreal hurled the discus 57,14 metres on her last attempt to win a bronze medal, The winner was Carmen Romero of Cuba, the . defending champion, with 60,58, Another Cubsn, Maria Betancourt, took the silver with 60.44, Geri Fitch of Toronto earned a bronze in the women’s 3,000 metres as she chased two Americans, Jan Merrill and Julie Braun, The times’ were 8:53.06 for Merrill, 8:59.9 for Braun and 9:53.7 for Fitch. Joao Carlos de Olivera of Brazil, long j and triple - mi Oe "" thiriatraight ‘fencing géld, jump’ ‘Winner the 1975 Games in Mexico City, defended his long jump title with a leap of 8.18 metres. The Herald, Monday, duly 9, iy, Page i and quallfied along with Anne Jardin of Pointe Claire, Que, The United States swimmers look set ta complete their program with a Pan-American Gamea record of 20 wins in 40 events, one better than they did four years ago. American Cynthia Wocdhead, a triple gold medallist so far, again set the fastest qualifying time in the women’s 100-metre freestyle with $7.31 seconds, David Giralt of Cuba was second with 8.15 and bronze medallst Carl Lewis of the U.S. cleared 8.15. Canada won silver and bronze medals on the last’ day of the shooting program as the centrefire pistol team finished second behind the United States. George Leary of Tororto was third in individual trapshooting. Robert Green of the U.S. was the top trapshooter and Oscar. Yuston of Argentino won the individual pistol gold. The U.S. maintained. its monopoly of artistic roller skating events with 1-2 sweeps in the women’s and pairs dancing finale as Canadians finished third. Natalie Dunn and Joan Young took the top medals in the women’s competition as Sylvie Gingras of Granby, Que, earned her second bronze. Lori Beal of Toronto and Robert Dalgleish of Burlington, Ont., came in behind two U.S. pairs. Two U.S. pairs were gold and silver medalists‘in the men’s 10,000-metre roller skating relay, but. Argentina won the 5,000 women’s relay. Cuba continued to pile up gold in weightlifting as light middleweight Roberto Urrutia and middleweight ‘anadian scullers get two gold, three silver Julio Echenique -won all - three categories in their divisions. Erle Rogers of Ed- monton took the silver in the middleweight snatch com- petition. The Cubans also.won jhelr finishing ahead of the U.S. and Argentina in the men’s team foil. TASTING: a full 1.4 seconds faster thary anyone ela¢, The U.S. basketball ccach, Bobby Knight tonk a brief, escorted visil 19 4 police sub station Sunday atter being! involved in what & games spokesman said wes 4 minor misunderstanding with a policeman during an. in- eldent al a morning practice eession. Knight was readying ha team for the night. gama against Canada, No charges: were laid. “Ki American sliver “Greg Louganis completed a; personal double and gave he! Americans a Sweep of ail four tithes in the inen's’ springboard cveni. ‘Sen Armstrong of Ingersoll, Ont., was fourth and Seott Cranham of Taranto was scratched after suffering an injury in practice Friday. The Canadian men's basketball tearm advanced Lo the sixteam final. ‘wYound- robin tournanient despite a 91-75 loss to anbeathl' Puerta Rico in its laktsorelininary game for ade ye tord! The woinen’s dijithail team had a: pair’ of, Heteries, defeating ‘the. "Pemé “nie nn Republic 2-1 int 10 ianitige and blanking Berguuds: 6&0. In field hockey, “the Canadians downed Barhadsi’$:1. The winless Canadian baseball tearm: Jost ity fourth game 7-7 lo Puerly Rico and the water pols ten Wasa 4-3" loser to Cubai, "124 “men's. volley ball tear. a dlealed. Venezueln 3-0. : Jan Clyde of Otthwa became the firs Canadian boxer lo reach the semi-: finals when he cutpainted’ Jorge Ecuador in the flyweight division. . Mid-: dieweight Lawrence Roife of Vancouver was stopped in the second roud by Jose Molina of Puerto Rica. Wendy Barlow of Victoriu continued unbeaten in the women's singles tennis tournament, daferting Aluminada Concedeion af Cuba 7-5, 346, 6-2 Nicole Marois of Quebee City lust ?- 5, &1 to Maria Llairias of Mexico. * so B.C. BEE! Fi. » ‘k. e. tom