4 Wednesday, July 21, 1976 University Daily Kansan Sports U.S. swimmers dominate By WICK TEMPLE AP Sports Editor MONTREAL—Brian Goodell and John Hencken continued America's world championship swimming events in the Summer Olympics yesterday. But American Shirley Bajabash lost her bid to best East German Petra Kubasova, a world champion in Germany. German domination of women's swimming Babasoh failed in a stretch duel with Thuner in the women's 400 freestyle. Goodell won the gold medal in the 1,500-meter freestyle and Henken won the 100-meter breaststroke gold, making five victories in as many men's swim events. Jennifer Chandler, 17, from Lincoln, Ala., won the gold medal in the Olympic three-game series. The American basketball team came from behind, netting two free throws in the second half. The Washington Ford, to beat men's R冰-954 in the second round of the men's cage tournament, a close call for a team that has lost only one game. It was the third and is favored to meet Russia for the title. The American women's basketball team kept its medal hopes alive with a 95-79 victory over Bulgaria. The Americans lost to Japan in their opening game and the Japanese beat Canada yesterday 121-89. Russia beat Czechoslovakia 88-75. In skeet-shooting, the United States won another gold medal from Don Haldeman, a 28-year-old tool and die maker from Souderton. Pa. The United States' eight-oared rowing cockpit will be the first time to Olympic flies. The American eight finished a badly beaten third behind Great Britain and Orioles beat Royals, 10-3 KANAS CITY (AP)—Lee May slammed two home runs, while Bobby Gribch and Reggie Jackson had one each to pounce for the bases in deciding of the Kansas City Royals last night. Grich drove in five runs with a homer, a triple and a walk. Wayne Garland, who has the best winning percentage in the American League, impressed at home and at the Gritch's two-run homer Baltimore's four-run third inning as the Orioles rebounded to a 2-0 deficit against loser Doug Bird, 9.3. Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East New York W L Pet. GB Baltimore 42 35 12 12 Cleveland 42 41 488 12 Greenwood 42 41 488 13/16 Boston 42 36 477 16/ Milwaukee 42 36 477 16/ Rancho City 56 34 622 Oakland 69 44 322 Toronto 10 34 9 Minnesota 41 48 681 Chicago 41 48 461 14½ California 29 25 15 NATIONAL LEAGUE East Oakland 7. Cleveland Hallamore 10. Kansas City 9. New York 6. Miami 9. Illinois New York 6. Miami 9. Rockton 4. Texas 7. W 10 L Pts. GR Pittsburgh 49 20 54 Pittsburgh 49 20 54 Pittsburgh 49 20 54 St. Louis 49 45 449 New York 49 45 449 Chicago 37 53 411 Chicago 37 53 411 Cheetahim Los Angeles Houston San Diego Atlanta San Francisco 57 31 48 620 -- 6 51 31 48 110 6 46 47 49 -495 11¼% 46 47 49 -495 11¼% 49 39 -495 11¼% 49 39 -495 11¼% Pittsburgh 9-14, Houston 5-4 Mostral 3-1, Seattle 2-1 Cleveland 1-1, Cinnamati San Diego 3, Philadelphia 0 Los Angeles 3, St. Louis 2 San Francisco 1 Czechoslovakia. The first two boats advanced to Sunday's finals. The race concluded two years of decline for the American oarsmen. They were upset winners in the World Championships in 1973 and in 1975 and now have been eliminated. Nikolai Kolesnikov gave the Soviet Union its second gold medal in weightlifting, winning the featherweight title with a total of 627 pounds. The Japanese men won the team gold medal in gymnastics, with the Soviet Union taking the silver medal and East Germany, the bronze. In the women's three-meter diving event, Chandler won the gold medal with 506.19 points. Second was Christa Kohler of East Carolina and third was Cynthia Mclevaine of Dallas. Goodell, of Mission Viejo), Calif., was a 150-meter freestyle Bobby Hocky of Yosemite. Athletic Director, Clyde Walker, has appointed Hank Hetter to the dual role of academic coordinator and recruiting coor- dinator in the KU football team effective August 1. 2 athletic roles being combined by appointment Hettwer, 39, has been an assistant football coach for KU the past two years and is a member of the women's national team. As academic coordinator, Hettwer will wise and counsel all KU athletes with any difficulty. "We felt the consolidation of these two positions would be in the best interest," Don Baker, director of sports information said. "These positions go hand-in-hand." Hettner came to Kansas in 1974 from Emporia Kansas State College, where he attended. He began his coaching career in 1960 as football wrestling coach at track and field, finsh school. He received his bachelor's degree from Moorhead State College in Moorhead, MN, and returned there in 1983 as a graduate assoc. at the University of Michigan track while completing his master's degrere. He was later named head wrestling coach and assistant football coach at MINT (N.D. State College, where he compiled a record of 35-1-1 through the 1968 wrestling season. That year, he became head football coach replacing former MU great Bill Schanek. Events won the silver in 15.03.91 and Steve Holland of Australia was third in 15.04.66. All three were under Goodell's previous world record of 15.06.66 for this metric mile event. "TONIGHT: SUA film 'HEART AND SOUL' is at 7:30 in Wooldorff Auditorium. The DUMMY theatre production "GUYS AND DUMMYs" will begin at 8 in University Theatre. ELENA BASTIDA, Lawrence graduate student, has been awarded a Fulbright-Hays travel Spanish government grant to study at the University Compulissee of Hawaii. She expects to go to Madrid in January after completing a doctorate at KU. Grants and Awards In the women's 400 meter swim, both Thurmer and Babahassoff broke the world record of 4.14:00. Thurmer was timed in the 4:14:50 and the 4:14:20 Smith of Canada was third in 4:14:60. Hencken, of Santa Barbara, Calif., produced his third world record time in two days in winning the men's 100-meter race. In Great Britain was second in 1:03.43 and Arvidas Iuozayti of the Soviet Union was third in 1:02.43. Hencken, 22, tied his word mark in Monday's preliminaries and beat it to 1:03.80 in Monday's semifinals. The crusade to restore Jim Thorpe's Olympic medals has broken down again Olympic Notes The International Olympic Committee decided yesterday to take no action on the fallen id of 64 years ago, a spokesman said. Thorpe won gold medals in the decathlon and pentathlon in the 1912 Olympics at Stockholm but was stripped of both of them. He also lost to Sir Alec Douglas for playing basketball three years before. Korbut, the darling of the 1972 Games in Munich, is now 21 and fighting to retain her gymnasium supremacy. Her stiff competition is expected to come from the 14-player national team that was precedentely perfect 10 scores in three phases of the team gymnastics competition. A confrontation between gymnasts Olga Korbut of the Soviet Union and Nadia Comaneci of Romania will highlight Olympic competition tonight. ★ Russian pentathlon champion Boris Onischenko, who was thrown out of the Olympics Monday for using a cheating device on his fall, flew back to the Soviet Union yesterday after he was dropped from the Soviet team. A Russian official said the incident was "a very sad matter and he will probably be stripped of all his medals and name." Onischenko is a master of sport, the soviets' highest honor for athletes. Egypt and Morocco joined the Olympic boycott yesterday, bringing to 30 the number of countries that have walked out of the Games. The tour is touring segregationist South Africa. ★ ★ IT'S HARD to forget the first time you ever saw such a sight. There's something frighteningly unnatural about seeing a house on wheels; sure, there are trailers (excuse me-mobile homes), but they're slicing it off in its basement, jacking it up like a communal toilet onto a truck and dumping it across the staggers the imagination. Indeed, it takes a heap of luggins to make a house leave home. And what about those walls and walls? Most houses that are moved are fairly well along in years, not quite as spry as they might once have been—and hardly suspecting that one dark day they would be buried in a mine, they and transplanted in foreign soil. Surely those floors would lose their spring, those walls their solid knock of confidence. And how bizarre it must be for the occupants of those houses, to be walking the same floors and facing the same walls in a totally different neighborhood. THE GRISLY headline possibilities are almost endless: PSIMO BEAM COUPE BUNGA-LOW. O: COTTAGE OWNER GRILLED HIT-AND RUN RAP. Woe the unhappy motorist, though, who fails to drive defensively when townhouses take to the turpines. Watching out for the other guy takes on added importance when that other guy has six rooms, two and a half baths and a sumporch. Progress has never come easily, however. How are we to move ahead if we're afraid to make dramatic changes? Soon we'll no longer have to be content with moving our houses from one side of town to the other. We'll be able to transport whole neighborhoods. Think of it: there need never be a wrong side of the tracks. But, if moving is called for, then move we must. Better wrenched up than torn down. As we drove home Monday night we noticed, in the blocks immediately preceding our house, that those peky little yellow signs had been posted again. Their neighbors were Parking. By Order of Sheriff "Good luck" to them. Noticees not spoke as clearly as a wanted poster in Dodge City. Another house was going to hit the streets. 1974 World Plan Executive Council—U.S. All rights reserved. Transitional Mental Health TM are service marks of WPEC—U.S. a non-profit, educational institution. Six Meat and Garden Toppings As those houses go rolling along This increase in habitat traffic could point up an exciting new trend. It's not so much urban renewal as urban . well, rearrangement. It's not at all uncommon anymore, at least in our neighborhood, to peek through the draperies and see not a car, not a truck, but walk its way calmly down the tree-lined avenue—looking for all the world like some forlorn cascade from the Parade of Homes. By RUN HARTUNG Contributing Writer The Best Pizza This Side of New York Transcendental Meditation Lecture Wed., July 21, 12:30 and 7:30 p.m. Kansas Union— International Room 842-1225 $2.00 OFF Coupon Expires July 31—So Hurry GIBSON'S reg. $ 4^{97} $ JOHN TRAVOLTA ON RECORDS & TAPES Now $3^{99} DAVID BOWIE CHANGESONEBOWIE JULY 26,1976 PRICES GOOD THROUGH JULY 26, 1976 2525 IOWA Lawrence, Ks. "ONE STOP SHOP" And why stop at neighborhoods? We can move whole cities. As Archimedes would have said, "Give me a big enough truck and I'll move Peoria." Parts for ALL Imported Cars JAMES CAMP JAMES CAMP FOREIGN AUTO PARTS 304 Locust M-F 8-5:30 843-8080 Saf, 8-12 We Write Motorcycle Insurance Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass. Leaving Town? See your Maupintour Travel Agent for complete travel arrangements at no extra cost. ★ Hotels ★ Cruises ★ Tours ★ Airline and Amtrak tickets ★ Resorts ★ Eurail Passes BOOK EARLY FOR BEST SELECTION! Rental Cars 1/3 lb. 100% GROUND BEEF (Pre-Cooked Weight) LETTEEK, PICKLE, ONION, CATUP, MUSTARD ON MAYONNAISE on A TOASTED BESAME SEED IN FRENCH FRIES COMBINATION Beefburger 843-1211/900 Mass./Hillcrest/The Malls/KU Union Mr.BIG $1.29 VALUE 99¢ Ice Cream Hand Packed Ice Cream Packed Tight & Heaped Luxuriously rich with Fruit & Nuts A GOURMET TREAT PINT ... 99¢ QUART ... $1.89 MALTS AND SHAKES Thick 'N CREAMY CHOICE OF FLAVORS 16 OZ. SHARE RED $99 MALT TEN $79 24 OZ. SHARE RED $99 MALT TEN $79 MANY FLAVORS TO CHOOSE FROM FOR THOSE ON RESTRICTED DIETS WE ALSO FEATURE Diet Maid A SUGAR FREE ICE CREAM SUBSTITUTE Peter Van ICE CREAM THE ICE CREAM POPULENCE STORES 1015 West 6th 521 West 23rd