f au a. ul 1. I T rage wire E "F- rvI% fv7x-m-4 LonIt- I -Pi t u I %Ja Y, F %&I y -V I , I 4F I %, Jenner wins decathlon - ;.; /Viren wins another gold medal By The Associated Press MONTREAL-American Bruce Jenner won the Olympic decath- 'I on gold medal yesterday in a - ,,.world-record performance and Finnish runner Lasse Viren pAjoined the long-distance legend of his countryman, Paavo Nur- ¢ mi, by becoming the first man to win the 5,000-meter and 10,000-meter runs in two straight Olympic Games. Viren won the 5,000 meters Friday in 13 minutes, 24.76 sec- onds, showing a strong kick in the final 100 meters to beat Dick Quaz of New Zealand and bronze medalist Klaus Hipden- brand of West Germany. Jenner won the decathlon with a world record 8,618 points. The old record was 8454 points set by Nikolay Avi- lov of Russia in 1972. Avilov was third in these Games, Guido Kratschmer of West German taking second. T h e 26-year-old, 195-pound Jenner, from San Jose, Calif., finished ninth in the 1972 Games, t and has dedicated himself to winning this time. He feels that the decathlon champ should have the title of "World's Great- est Athlete." When Jenner crossed the fin- ish line second in the 1,500- meter run-the last of the 10 events-his wife, Chrystie, was standing there in a yellow T- shirt lettered "Go, Jenner, Go!" She was weeping with joy. Jenner put his arms around her and kissed her. Not since the 1920s, when Nui-mi, the "Flying Finn," won nine gold medals and three silvers in three Olym- pics, has one athlete dominat- ed the lonely world of the long- distance runner the way Viren has. AP Photo Viren, a 27-year-old policeman THE WORLD'S GREATEST ATHLETE, America's Bruce . took the lead in the closely bun- Jenner, throws up his hands in jubilation after finishing the ched pack in the 5,000 with 1500 meter race, the last event in the decathlon. Jenner won about seven laps to go. He lost the decathlon with a world record 8,618 points. it, then got it back with 2 WANT MISSING DIVER BACK laps to go. He won the 10,000 meters Monday and said he already is planning for the 1984 Games in Moscow where he will try to sweep the big two for the third straight time. No one ever had won the 5,000 and 10,000 twice in a row and no ever had won the 5,000 twice. Viren said after yesterday's race that he would go for a triple by competing in Satur- day's marathon. He would be the first since Emil Zatopek of Chechoslovakia to win all three events in one Olympics. Zatopek did it in 1952. Tatyana Kazankina of the Soviet Union won her second gold medal of these Games, capturing the 1,500 meters in 4:05.48. East Germans finished second and third with Gunhild Hoffmeister and Ulrike Kal- pezynski. The United States swept indi- vidual archery competition, with defending world champion Darrell Pace, 19-year-old Air Force computer technician from Cincinnati and 23-year-old Luann Ryen of Riverside, Calif., taking men's and women's honors. Russia's Viktor Saneyev won the triple jump with a leap of 56 feet, 83 inches and became the first triple jumper in Olym- pic history to win the event in three consecutive Games. James Butts of Los Angeles won the silver medal with a jump of 56-4%1 and Joal de Oliviera of Brazil was third. New Zealand defeated Aus- tralia 1-0 for the gold medal in field hockey. Australia got the silver and Pakistan won the bronze with a 3-2 triumph over the Netherlands. Christine Stueckelberger of Switzerland, riding Granat, won the individual gold medal in Grand Prix dressage equestrian competition. She outscored two West Germans, her only serious rivals. Dorothy Morkis, 33, of Raynham, Mass., placed fifth aboard Monaco. Japan regained the women's Olympic volleyball title with a 3-0 victory over the Soviet Union. The Russians had won the gold medal in the past two Games but had to settle for the silver. South Korea won the bronze. Russia and East Germany dominated the canoe and kayak medal events, with no Ameri- cans winning even a bronze. East Germans oachin Mattern and Bernd Olabricht won the men's 500-meter kayak doubles and Carola Zirsow of East Ger- many won the women's 500 ka- yak singles. The Russians swept the canoe events, with Aleksandr Rogov winning the Canadian singles, Sergei Petrenko and Aleksandr Vinogradov taking the 500 men's Canadian doubles and Nina Go- pova and Galina Kreft winning the women's 500 kayak pairs. Romania's Vasile Diba won the men's kayak singles. Woody amits h turned in MSU-see±s story~ 15 Hayes Major League Standings Soviets threaten to quit MONTREAL - The Soviet Union warned last night it would pull out of the final phase of the Montreal Olympics if a teen-age Soviet diver, ap- parently a defector to Canada, is not returned immediately to Russian officials. The Soviets said the 17-year-old was kidnaped. Canada reacted immediately and a spokesman in Ottawa said Soviet Ambassador Alexander Yakolev was summoned to receive an official note saying Canada rejected the charge and could not accept such an unwarranted allega- tion. THE RUSSIANS did not make precise what they meant by immediately and set no deadline for the return of the diver. The Canadian authorities said, however, they would undertake a search for 17-year-old Sergei Nemtsanov, who was said to be traveling in central Canada. He will be asked, they added, if he wants to meet the Soviet coach in the pres- ence of a Canadian witness. Vitali Smirnov, vice president of the Soviet Olympic Committee, also said the Soviet Union would reconsider taking part in the World Cup Ice Hockey tournament in Canada this Septem- ber unless satisfactory explanations were given about Nemtsanov. The Russians attempted to portray as a kid- napping what Canadian officials said was Nemt- sanov's request for residence in Canada. "We call it a planned provocation," said Smirnov. "It's a unilateral attempt to disrupt contacts between Soviet and Canadian sports bodies. We will be obliged to reconsider sports contacts between Canada and the USSR for this year." HE WENT ON, "We will not participate in the final phase of the Olympics, perhaps, if im- mediate measures are not taken. We reserve the right not to participate. "We demand with insistence that the ath- lete be returned," said Smirnov. Although Canadian authorities have said there is no age limit for a foreigner to seek residence in Canada and that the diver was traveling with friends someplace in central Canada, Smirnov insisted: "We've had no reasonable replies un- til now with the exception of a reference to a mythical third force. "This is an illegal disappearance of a Soviet citizen," he said. "The climate within the Soviet team is not good because the guarantees given by the Canadian government about their security are not being carried out" SMIRNOV SAID the boy's parents had tele- phoned requesting information concerning his whereabouts. "We are in an embarrassing situa- tion because his parents are saying, 'We gave you this child -and we want to know what hap- pened to him.' We have no answer for them." The diver is the third Olympic athlete from the East European Communist bloc to defect during the Games. AMERICAN LEAGUE East W L Pct. GB New York 61 36 .629 - Baitimore 51 48 .514 11 Cieveiand 40 49 .494 13 Detroit 47 Si .481 14% Bnstan 44 14 .450 17 }z Miiwaukee 42 53 .443 18 West Kansas City 61 38 .616 - Oakland 53 48 .526 9 Minnesota 50 50 .500 1i12 Texas 47 52 .476 14 -Chicago 41 54 .455 155 Caifornia 43 59 .42 1 9 Yesterday's Eesults Cleveland 7, Milwaukee 2 (1st games New York 6, Boston 4 Baltimore 7, Detroit 3 Kansas City 2, Texas 1 Minnesota 0, Oakand 7 Chicago at California, n Today's Games New York(Hunter 12-9 and Hoit- man 0-61 at Boston (Jenkins 9-8 and Cleverand 4-5), 2, d-n Oakiod (Mitchel 7-5) at Minne- sota (Gotz 8-9) Detroit (Lemanzyck 2-2) at Balti- more (Palmer 14-8), n Cleveland (Bibby 6-3) at Milwau- kee (Slaton 12-, n Texas (Blylevan 7-12) at Kansas City (Fitzmorris 12-6), n Chicago (Johnson 9-9) at Califor- nia (Ross 6-12), n NATIONAL LEAGUE East w L Pet. GB Philadelphia 66 32 .673 -- Pittsburgh 56 43 .566 10 New York 52 51 .505 16Y: St. Louis 42 55 433 231/, Chicato 42 59 .416 251; Montreal 33 61 .351 30 West Cincinnati 65 38 .631 - Los Angeles 55 44 .556 0 Houston 52 52 .500 03 San Diego 49 55 .471 16% Atianta 46 54 .460 i7/ San Francisco 44 58 .4310 2% Late game not included Yesterday's Resnits Ciciago 7, St. Louis 6 Cincinnati 13-4, San Diego 8-2 Pittsburgh 4, Montreal 3, 13 inn. New York 3, Philadelphia 2 Atlanta 3, Houston 2 Los Angeles at San Francisco, n Today's Games Philadelphia (Christenson 9-5) at New York (Matiack 10-5), 2:15 p.m St. Louis (McGlothen 9-9) at Chi- cago (Stone 2-3), 2:15 p.m. Los Angeles (Sutton 11-8) at San Francisco (Montefusco 9-9), 4:05 p.m. Atlanta (Ruthven 11-8 and De- vine 1-2) at Houston (Richard 11- 11 and McLaughlin 1-0), , 6:35 p.m. San Diego (Strom 9-11) at Cin- cinnati (Norman 9-2), 7 p.m. Montreal (Stanhouse 7-4) at Pittsburgh (Reuss 10-5), 7:05 p.m.