kenberto,
It appears that you put your Windows boot stanza in with the automagic boot stanzas. Probably to get it to boot by default. Up toward the top of that file is an entry you can use to select the default boot. You want it set as shown below to get Windows to boot by default. The numbering starts at 0 and you count the number of title lines that aren't commented.
## default num
# Set the default entry to the entry number NUM. Numbering starts from 0, and
# the entry number 0 is the default if the command is not used.
default 4
The boot stanzas at the bottom should look like I have shown below.
## ## End Default Options ##
title Linux Mint, kernel 2.6.22-16-generic
root (hd0,1)
kernel /boot/vmlinuz-2.6.22-16-generic root=/dev/sda2 ro quiet splash
initrd /boot/initrd.img-2.6.22-16-generic
boot
title Linux Mint, kernel 2.6.22-16-generic (recovery mode)
root (hd0,1)
kernel /boot/vmlinuz-2.6.22-16-generic root=/dev/sda2 ro single
initrd /boot/initrd.img-2.6.22-16-generic
boot
title Linux Mint, kernel memtest86+
root (hd0,1)
kernel /boot/memtest86+.bin
boot
### END DEBIAN AUTOMAGIC KERNELS LIST
# This is a divider, added to separate the menu items below from the Debian
# ones.
title Other operating systems:
#
title Win XP
root (hd0,0)
savedefault
makeactive
chainloader +1
As merlwiz79 pointed out, the stanzas not within the automagic section are not tampered with. Any boot stanzas you want to manually add and be persistent must be before the line:
### BEGIN AUTOMAGIC KERNELS LIST
or after the line:
### END DEBIAN AUTOMAGIC KERNELS LIST
You select the stanza you want to boot by default with the setting I showed you above. By counting the number of "title" lines from the top to the stanza you want to boot, less one. If you want your Windows stanza to appear at the top of your menu you would put that stanza above the "begin" line and leave the default set to 0 to boot it by default.
I hope this helps you.
Fred