Sunday mctgazine Page Three inside: page four-books page 5--profile February 8, 1976 Number 16 FEATURI ES 0 s Transcending sports By AL HRAPSKY THERE ARE A dozen other gym- nasts practicing in the quiet, sweat-stenched room, but he is not aware of them. Concentrating on nothing but his next move, he goes through his routine with the prac- ticed familiarity of an actor recit- ing his lines. Using his shoulder as an axis and his arms as supports, he shifts his weight from one arm to the other, propelling his taut, muscular body in precise circles above the pommel horse. Quickly and fluently, he brings his legs to a 60 degree angle with his upper torso, straddles the horse, and smoothly scissors it with pendu- lum-like movements. w itN the touch of art pommel horse. Although the mis- take is almost imperceptible to anyone watching, the flaw causes the gymnast to dismount hastily in frustration. The scene is Michigan's gymnas- tics room, tucked neatly away in an obscure corner of the Intramur- al.Building on Hoover St. The gym- nast is Jerry Poynton, Michigan's premiere pommel horseman and team co-captain. Spending at least 20 hours per week in arduous prac- tice, he is striving for aesthetic perfection in his sport. The gymnastics room, where he can be found almost any after- noon, is filled with mats, a leather pommel horse, mounted bars and susupended rings. Along one wall there are a couple of empty bench- es. Only the occasional dull thud But, his sense of timing is exactly perfect this time and leg brushes gently against not one the of a gymnast landing on the plas- tic - covered foam mats breaks the quiet. COACH NEWT Loken stands on . one side of the room, watch- ing his boys and waiting to give advice. He has coached the Michi- gan team for 28 years and has come to think of his team as his "family" and his gymnasts as "sons." Like all coaches, he under- scores the need for competition, but he also stresses that gymnas- tics is a form of artistic expression. "I keep telling the guys that they're out in the middle of a stage and that when the light comes on, they're performing before an audience. It's like a one-act play with an opening, middle and fi- nale. And just like in show busi- ness, you try to bring the house down." Although Loken believes judging is necessary, a few team members argue that the competitive nature of a gymnastics meet obscures the true pursuit of artistic perfection and the human element of creativ- ity. Poynton, a vegetarian who prac- tices transcendental mediation and yoga, believes that declaring a win- ner or loser at gymnastics meets undermines the true nature of the sport. "J'M TRYING TO develop myself into a certain individual, both mentally and physically," he says. Muscle control, body coordination, then working with the mind - it all leads to a certain level of ful- fillment. When you go into a gym meet, you go to win but basically you're out there because it's a rush. I guess one of my goals is to be able to be conscious of my movements and be able to control them perfectly." Poynton is idealistic in advocat- ing a more artistic approach to gymnastics. By sanctioning judg- ing at meets, he reasons, a winner or loser is decided, so by eliminat- ing them, "people would come to see gymnastics, not a winner or high or low score." But while Poynton has often discussed his philosophy with Loken, the talka- tive, ebullient coach is the first to admit that competition parallels aestheic excellence. "The gymnast performs for -the appreciation of the audience whose level isn't nec- essarily as high as that of a judge's," says Loken. "So we need the competitive edge to raise the athlete's level of performance." Doug Shokes, a soft-spoken par- allel bar specialist, disagrees with Loken and favors the complete elimination of judging. "I don't think it's necessary to have com- petition," he asserts. Gymnastics can be appreciated for its own beauty. The most important thing is to enjoy using your body." Shokes was originally a member of Indiana State's gymnastics team, but transferred to Michigan last year on the advice of Poyn- ton, his high school chum. Indiana Coach Roger Counsil is a rigid taskmaster who runs a disciplined program and allows his athletes only a modicum of latitude in de- vising their individual routines. Mechanical perfection, not crea- tivity, is his maxim - winning is emphasized. "WE HAD A fixed time for prac- tice and couldn't be late," Shokes caustically retorted. "I felt that my scholarship was hanging over my head and that the coach might take it away at any time. I always had it in the back of my mind that I was going to quit. Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN Pierre LeClerc performing on the parallel bars There's a certain type of gymnast that goes to Indiana State and I don't think he enjoys gymnastics as much." Pierre LeClerc, Michigan co- captain, loosened up on the paral- lel bars during a recent practice. He is working toward artistic per- fection, but emphasizes in his French - Canadian accent that gymnastics in an artform, "only if an athlete makes it so." A dim- inutive, all-round gymnast, Pierre competes in all six gymnastic events: still rings, pommel horse, high bar, floor exercise, vaulting, and parallel bars. He is also a member of an elite corps of inter- national athletes. For the last two years, he has competed with the Canadian National team in Rus- sia, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia, Ger- many, and Japan. After 13 years of competition, the Quebec native pays little heed to scores. "In international competition, gymnastics really become an art when you master the skills and techniques," he said. "But at the college level, it's moving in the wrong direction. Some try to win and all will do anything to do it. The really basic stuff could be ex- plosive and dynamic if people would put their own style into it. See GYMNASTS, Page 5 Al Hrapskh is a contributing editor on The Daily Sports Staff. Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN Jerry Poynton displays his skills on the pommel horse Tattooing reviva:k Colorful coverup blooms By GEORGE LOBSENZ HIS SLIM, naked body is a canvas painted with colorful images. Underneath his grey t-shirt, his skin crawls with designs of snakes, stars, and eagles. On his left bicep, Betty Boop poses coyly. His name is "Painless John" Ardner. He runs the only tattoo parlor in town with his partner Chris "Stinger" Clarke. His own body is the gallery of a tattoo artist. "I got my first one about 10 years ago," Painless John says and flexes a bare bicep to show an eagle spreading its wings. ,He's working on an eagle now whose wings will span the width of his chest. One green wing has already been engraved, and the outline of the other has been done. "I'm shooting to get 'em from the waist up," he says. Below the waist he's got a petite red rose in a place he's not as quick to show off. It was six months ago that Pain- less John and Stinger opened their parlor inside a small ,one room building that squats between the faded houses at the corner of Main St. Since then, the two have em- blazoned more than 4,000 tattoos on the skin of everyone from busi- nessmen to college students. ANIS JOPLIN HAD a heart tat- tooed on her breast and a wore tattoos. But tattooing has re- cently blossomed into such a sheek status symbol that it is the young women who are now offering their skin to the tatoo artist in the larg- est numbers. What most of the women want is "a little butterfly or rose, right around the shoulder," says Sting- er. Since they opened up shop six months ago, Painless and Stinger have filled some bizarre requests. "I put a rose on a guy's butt," said Painless in a tone that implied he thought his customer was slightly nuts. "Another fella wanted horoscope sign on the soles of feet. Some want 'em inside mouth. You just never know." his his the BUT PAINLESS John has been around tattooing for too long to be easily shocked. "I've seen an eight ball done on the top of a guy's head, the Last Supper on a guy's back, ears with little stars on 'em - it's amazing," he snick- ered. Painless John Ardner and Sting- er became seriously interested in professional tattooing about a year and a half ago. They spent a week in London, Ontario learning the art from a friend who's been a professional tattooist for more than 20 years. "It takes about a week to learn the basics, like how to handle the gun, the inks, how to keep the needles clean," says Pain- less John. Then for a few months, the pair rented a basement in Ypsilanti where they experimented and re- fined their work. "We just kind of See TATTOOING, Page 4 George Lobsenz is a Daily day editor and staff writer. ~rnr IMMOMERIMEMENA=