j:x-'M' coach Harbaugh lassos VMU job By JOHN KERR As was expected, Western Michigan announced yesterday that it had hired former Michigan assistant coach Jack Har- baugh to take over the head football coaching duties for the Broncos. Harbaugh, 42, served as the defensive backfield coach for the Wolverines from 1973-1979, before becoming the defen- sive co-ordinator at Stanford, a position he held until yester- day's announcement. "I'M REALLY happy,;" said Harbaugh, who played college football-for another Mid-American school, Bowling Green. "It's like coming home for me," The decision to hire Harbaugh came as no surprise as he was rumored to have been Western's top choice to fill the coaching vacancy. And although the announcement was of- ficially made yesterday, Harbaugh knew he had the job earlier in the week. "He (Western Michigan's athletic director Tom Won- derling) called me Tuesday night and told me I was his choice," the new head coach admitted. HARBAUGH WILL replace another former Michigan assistant, Elliot Uzelac. Uzelac was fired November 24 by Wonderling after he had led Western to a 6-5 season. Uzelac compiled a 38-39 record during seven years with the Broncos. Harbaugh and Uzelac worked together for two years when both were Michigan assistants. Consequently, Harbaugh said he wasn't about to make major changes in the Western program. "I have the utmost respect for Elliot;" Harbaugh'said. "We're close friends. I just hope I can match the standards he set (at Western)." THE ROOKIE head coach has wasted no time in getting on the job. Harbaugh has already begun recruiting athletes to play at Western. However, being new to the Bronco program has presented a few problems for Harbaugh; he must first learn how to sell the university to prospective recruits. "The hard thing is to learn (about Western) and get the in- formation you need (to recruit players)," Harbaugh added. Before joining Michigan's staff in 1973, Harbaugh served as the secondary coach at Morehead State in Kentucky in 1967, in the same capacity for Bowling Green from 1968-1970, and also with Iowa from 1970-1971.' The Michigan Daily-Friday, December 11, 1981-Page 13 Spikers i'n final81 TALLAHASSEE, Fla. - The Michigan women's volleyball team managed to keep its hopes of capturing the national volleyball crown alive yesterday by advancing in the first round of the AIAW National Champion- ships hosted by Florida State. Coach Sandy Vong's unseeded Wolverines had rough going in their first outing of the tour- nament, being dominated in ail 11-15, 2-15, 7-15 sweep at the hands of ninth-ranked and top-seeded Texas. The double-elimination policy of the tournament was the only thing that saved the Michigan spikers from a long, cold trip home to Ann Arbor. The Wolverines took advantage of this reprieve and bounded back with the determination that has earned them Big Ten and MAIAW Regional championships and a 39-13 season record, grin- ding out a 15-8, 15-10, 14-16, 17-15 victory over an eighth-seeded Pittsburgh squad. In later tournament play Pit- tsburgh fell to Texas as well, being eliminated from com- petition completely. Michigan and Texas, along with six other teams, advanced into and eight team double elimination tournament. Matches continue today and will last until a champion is determined. If the Wolverines are able to pull a jew upsets and win the title, it will mark the first national championship won by a Michigan team since the men's gymnastics team pulled the trick in 1970. Paumier sets new marks By KARL WHEATLEY Tami Paumier broke her arm prac- ticing gymnastics one day in high school; and it may have been one of the best "breaks" she has ever received. She certainly didn't enjoy the ex- perience, but when she took to the swimming pool to rehabilitate her arm, it started her successful involvement in competitive swimming. PAUMIER'S ARM is much better now, as demonstrated by the freshman breaststrokers' impressive perfor- mances this year for Michigan's. women's swim team. In the Wolverines' season opener this year, the Bowling Green relays, Paumier swam in five of Michigan's first-place finishes as Michigan won the meet for the second straight year. In her second meet, Michigan's home-opener 85-64 win over MSU, Paumier walked away with Wolverine varsity records in the 50-yard and 200- yard- breaststroke events. She also found the energy to win the 100-yard in- dividual medley with an excellent time of 1:00:09. LAST WEEKEND, she saw tough in- ternational competition at the Canada Cup meet in Toronto. "I was disappoin- ted," Paumier responded to her fourth- place finishes in the 100-meter and 200- meter breaststroke events. Hopes are hig0h for freshman s wimmer Women's swim coach Stu Isaac doesn't seem disappointed. "She's a little bit ahead of where I expected her to be," said Isaac. "We're- real happy with her progress so far." ONE OF THE reasons that Paumier came all the way from her home town of Columbia, Md. to Michigan was because of the "good combination of athletics and academics." Her oldest sister, Kim, was a letter-winner' on the Michigan swim squad in 1980, while her other sister, Terri, is a senior on the swim squad at Ohio State, and won the Big Ten title last year in the 50-yard freestyle. "I really like it here, but I was real homesick for a while," she said of her first term away from home. "You're so independent, I think that's what I like. I guess I wanted to be on my own." While she no longer has anyone to remind her to take her vitamins, the girl whose teammates call "Cindy Lou Who", af- ter the quiet, shy girl in Dr. Suess' The Grinch Stole Christmas, sounds con- fident that she can handle such in- dependence. For right now, she feels that she has found a good balance between her 20- hours-a-week at swim workouts, social life, and her full-time class load in the School of Natural Resources. She doesn't seem quite sure, but thinksthat architecture school is her academic goal. ONE THING she is sure about is that she likes swimming. "I'm not swimming for publicity, but there is something about swimming that I enjoy," said Paumier. "I enjoy getting in there and working hard. I like knowing that I'm in good shape." With her gold'medal in the 1979 Pan American Games for the 100-meter breaststroke, and her accomplishments since then, she is best known for keeping in shape by way of the breast- stroke. But she prefers swimming the individual medley (IM). "I'm not as good in the IM, but I like it better because it is more of a challenge." Isaac feels that Paumier is good enough at meeting challenges to finish in the top four or five in breaststroke at the AIAW Nationals this year. Despite all this success, predicted and past, Paumier says, "I kind of don't want people to know that I'm a swim- mer. I don't like the stereotypes that go along with being a woman swimmer." Paumier will just have to take facing those stereotypes as just, another challenge. With her success in the pool, it seems guaranteed that her identity as a swimmer won't be a well-kept secret. Support the March of Dimes, uSIRTN DEFECTS FOUNOATON You must be kidding Al'Photo Trevor Berbick, right, grins as Muhammad Ali looks at the scales during the weigh-in yesterday in Nassau, Bahamas in preparation for tonight's fight. Berbick weighed in at 214 lbs. while Ali tipped the scales at 236 lbs. SPOR TS OF THE DAILY: Hayes threatens reporter Paumier ... impressive freshman HOUSTON (AP) - A Houston broad- caster said he was threatened last night. by' former Ohio State football coach Woody Hayes when he asked about the Gator Bowl incident that led to Hayes' dismissal. Alvin Jackson, sports director for radio station KMJQ, recorded the con- versation with Hayes, who was a guest speaker at the 12th annual Lombardi sward banquet last night. HAYES WAS fired shortly after he struck Clemson noseguard Charlie Bauman, who had intercepted a pass that stopped an Ohio State drive in the closing minutes of the Dec. 30, 1978, Gator Bowl game Ohio State lost 17-15. "Get off, get off of it," Hayes said just before he threatened to knock Jackson down, according to the broadcaster's pe recording. Jackson, a 6-foot-4, 265-pound former Penn State defensive tackle, said he thought at first that Hayes was just joking. "I THOUGHT after all these years he would have mellowed with age, ap- parently not," said Jackson. Hayes was taking part in the awards ceremonies and was not immediately available for comment. Awards banquet spokesman Al Busse sa)d he thought the whole incident "was ~hut of place" and added that he "resen- ed the whole issue being brought up" to a banquet guest. Nissalke axed SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - The Utah Jazz fired Coach Tom Nissalke yester- day and replaced him with General Manager Frank. Layden, Jazz President Sam Battistone said. ,The Jazz, 8-12 for the season, have oft 10 of their last 13 games. Nissalke was fired one day after Utah was blown out 113-77 by Indiana and two days after falling 128-103 to Dallas. "This was a very recent decision based on the things that have taken place," Battistone said. "Frank and I just made the decision today. There's been a lot of criticism and we felt today was the day we needed to make a decision." Templeton for Smith? HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (AP) - The St. Louis Cardinals and San Diego Padres, locked in day-long negotiations for shortstops Garry Templeton and Ozzie Smith, announced what they called a "partial trade" at baseball's winter meetings yesterday. The Cardinals will send outfielder Sixto Lezcano and a player to be named later - presumably Templeton - to the Padres for pitcher Steve Mura and a player to be named later - ostensibly Smith. THE SHORTSTOPS were not in- cluded in the immediate announcement because of technical difficulties in the renegotiation of their contracts. Tem- pleton is entering the third year of a six- year, $4.4 million deal and Smith makes a reported $300,000 a year on his con- tract. Earlier the shortstops were reported to be the key men in a much larger swap between the teams, and because the trade was within the same league, there was no deadline facing the clubs. But General Managers Whitey Herzog of the Cardinals and Jack McKeon of the Padres decided to go ahead on the portion of the deal to which they had agreed. Herzog, also the Cards' field manager, said this will be a bigger trade than any he made at last year's winter meetings, when he was the busiest general manager at the conven- tion, swapping major players daily. "THIS DEAL will be more important to the Cardinals and San Diego because of the names involved," Herzog said. Mura and Lezcano seemed to be the appetizers with the main dishes still ahead. NCAA reprimands ABC GREENVILLE, S.C. (AP)- The NCAA sent ABC-TV a telegram "strongly" objecting to having the net- work air allegations of Clemson football recruiting violations during the Nov. 28 Penn State-Pittsburgh football game. Tom Hansen, assistant to the executive director of the NCAA and its TV program director, told The Green- ville News that the message sent Nov. 27 to ABC's Roone Arledge was over the signature of NCAA executive director Walter Byers. The newspaper reported yesterday that Hansen said he was not aware if ABC replied before it showed the inter- views, in which Knoxville, Tenn., foot- ball players Terry Cofer and James Minor said they had been given money to sign to play with Clemson. COLLEGE MONEY! Don't let a lack-of noney keep you from get- ting the higher education of-your choice. Do you know there is over 3 BILLION DOLLARS IN FINANCIAL AID AVAILABLE TO STUDENTS ANNUALLY? The secret lies in knowing where and for what to apply. Let Scholarships Unlimited put an end to your money, problems! we provide you with a print-out of 5 TO 25 SOURCES OF FINAN- CIAL ASSISTANCE. These are completely up-to-date and only those for which you specifically qualify. 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