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LettersPublished on January 02, 1997Distaff Dis The "perky" swimmer Amy Van Dyken became the first American woman to win four gold medals in a single Olympic Games. (Do you suppose anyone ever described Mark Spitz as "perky"?) She captured the 50-meter freestyle and the 100-meter butterfly and was part of two victorious relay teams. Jenny Thompson won three gold medals (her career total of five ties her with Bonnie Blair for the most by a U.S. woman). Brooke Bennett won the 800-meter freestyle, and Angel Martino won four medals--two bronze and two gold. The Olympics also provided a farewell performance for Janet Evans, one of the best long-distance swimmers the country has ever produced. Michele Smith of Ireland turned in an outstanding performance, winning three golds and a bronze; she also put to rest vicious rumors by passing drug tests handily. American women won team golds in Olympic basketball, soccer and softball. The U.S. women's basketball team triumphed in a brutal year-long tour, winning all 62 games and capturing its first gold since 1988. Powered by the play of Dawn Staley, Lisa Leslie and Teresa Edwards, the team swept through the Olympic competition and electrified the capacity crowd in the Georgia Dome by stomping Brazil in the championship game. In Olympic soccer, the U.S. women won the inaugural tournament by edging China 2-1. Tiffany Milbrett scored the game-winning goal in front of 78,481 people, the largest crowd ever to watch a women's sporting event. The Olympic softball team, led by shortstop Dot Richardson (who also happens to be an orthopedic surgeon), beat China to win gold. Richardson's homer sealed the win. The 100-meter race in the Olympic track and field competition proved to be one of the most exciting ever as American Gail Devers beat Jamaican Merlene Ottey in a photo finish. American Gwen Torrance finished third. In tennis, Germany's Steffi Graf overcame nagging injuries and her father's legal problems to have one of her best years. Monica Seles started her first full season by winning the Australian Open. Golf has another new hero in 21-year-old Australian Karrie Webb, who became the first woman to win over $1 million in a single season. And, finally, there are now two women's professional basketball leagues in this country. The American Basketball League team in Colorado--the Xplosion--is on a nine-game winning streak. You have heard of them, haven't you? They're the only winning pro basketball team in Denver. Amy Lewis Limited-Stakes Grambling As far as forcing Coach Rob out: He is a legend, and every good legend knows when it's time to hang up the football helmet and get out. Rob's problem is that if he had his way, he would die coaching on the football field. The only way to get him out is to force him to retire. I think he deserves one more year, but that's it. Don't get us wrong at Grambling. We love him, but he's got to go. It's time for us to move on and look toward the future--a future without the best coach in the nation. Denice Richards Pros and Converts As far as the tenets of modern Asatru go, courage is certainly one virtue among many that we honor. Others include hospitality, truthfulness, industriousness and self-reliance. We tend not to focus much on "forgiveness," since if one's actions are honorable, there is no need for forgiveness, either by one's fellow humans or by our gods and goddesses. "Morally lazy"? Hardly--but basing one's opinion of a religion's merit on one recent convert's throwaway line about one tenet is certainly intellectually lazy. J. Frederick Loucks-Schultz Crap-40 Radio
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