The Michigan Daily-Friday, March 5, 1982--Page 11 WOLVERINES LOOK AHEAD TO REGIONALS: Gymnasts state champs By JESSE BARKIN -11was undoubtedly the smallest state meet in history, as it turned out it was a dual meet, but it didn't matter as the Wolverine women's gymnastics team claimed the Michigan State Champion- ship at Crisler Arena last night. The Wolverines outpointed Northern Michigan 138.85-120.10 in their final meet , before regionals and Kathy Beckwith emerged as the state cham- pion in the all-around with a 35.5, but something was missing-competition. CENTRAL Michigan was the third team scheduled for the meet, but could not make it , due to bad weather. Michigan State, runner-up in the Big Ten, was also absent but this was due to a provision which prohibits NCAA schools, like MSU, from competing at the meet. Michigan is in a unique position of having dual status in the NCAA and the sponsoring AIAW, and is permitted to compete. Coach Sheri I yatt said she will find out today if the team is invited to NCAA regionals; they lieve already qualified for AIAW. As for the meet itself, it was a chance foi the Wolverines to improve their scaores to qualify for both regionals. "It vas just not great competition," said coach Sheri Hyatt. "We knew we had to get up for the meet, and we knew what we had to do." BECKWITH, who led a four-woman Wolverine sweep in the all-around, took firsts in the vault (9.0) and the balance beam (9.2), and added an 8.9 on the floor. Freshman Dayna Samuelson was equally impressive taking two firsts, a 9.0 to tie Nancy Papows on the bars, and an 8.8 on the uneven parallel bars, en route to a 35.3 all-around. Papows finished third with a 33.95 and freshman Christy Schwartz, who was nursing a hurt ankle, placed fourth despite re-injuring her ankle when she fell on the next to last event, the balan- ce beam. Though injuries have nagged Sch- wartz all season, she has been a critical member of .the team, which is somewhat surprising because when she applied to Michigan as a senior at An- dover High School in Birmingham, gymnastics was not the reason. "I CAME HERE for academics," Schwartz said. "I thought about the team, I wanted to be on the team, but I wasn't sure if I'd make it." But Hyatt decided she was good enough, and made her one of the team's four all-arounders. Swartz has im- proved all season and was runner-up in the uneven bars at the Big Ten Cham- pionships. "I'm doing better than I expected," she understated, but she explained that it was a real surprise for her to be doing all-around. "I hadn't competed all- around since my sophomore year in high school, but because there were so many injuries on the team, I was the only one left." After a slow start, Schwartz has become a consistent performer, reaching the 34 all-around mark on many occasions. But injuries have been with her all season (earlier in the year she hurt her knee and it has not been 100 percent since, Hyatt said) and her bad ankle seems to have come at a very bad time for her, just intime for regionals. "We're keeping our fingers crossed," she said in reference to her chance of healing in time (March 19-20). I'll do it (compete) if it kills me. I just don't know if I'll make it to next week's prac- tice." Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK MICHIGAN'S CHRISTY Schwartz, the Big Ten runner-up on the uneven parallel bars, performs her routine at Crisler Arena last night. Schwartz scored an 8.65 and placed second in last night's meet. ,.FLIPPER FU NNIES? !?f IVE JUSTQAU7 ~? 4P"~. ~ -0rvt,&cr ThE lilA 'f - £- 50 -~~~ o o'~tI?~lljJ CELLO tx(dS'6NSAYS," THE JG1He1 Sr RE ON5E LE CTD6,AM.ES) r p.1 W1 QI w CAN 4WIN AN ABSOLsaL ' F E VIDEO WJIARZc®, A ~"PAC-MA* W (L 3GINI RED' oe jE, ON 51 FITS AL<.Y r "* I'LL H AV TO t PRACTicE AO~B.9L 4 A- HA). ..aND so PTEq WE HAVE A Fu-LL LwEJiS o AOHRFvN f eia MAHIGST56oRE T-I'5 APJD$ ou 4 Ho op , AND I WON _ ~TOO! J # F INALLYJ!1 """ FRJENPLY f M VAJ~i4 W FREE1 }' W&ELL, 17"T TZk MI AND S ~OM- L CK, (BUT J RANKSTIi) FLIPPERZ W6,CE, p11) wJm THIS lvKA MJ3 J-)LUTLY FRS E.r,. I- - ,. ,.. e54Purchaso 1 worth ofFEE IGAMEwihith this coupon.' Exp. 3-11-82 4 1 LIPPE(L -1M L'SE .CiB7ZF.$AJA'4fl8O I lPPER. r14,e SL.iv~sveAROR. j LPER M rCEE"S 5 M+-jcoos$ " PSIcAA/T on1OOJ, ir3^ap O'R AR 5RiE"Aec10 e" P Po~E~tER wEa PLEASE" -N DUo m PAID ADVERTISEMENT 'leers face Irish in CCHA playoff opener I By MARTHA CRALL a The Michigan hockey team embarks upon its "second season" tonight as the first round of the Central Collegiate Hockey Association (CCHA) playoffs gets underway in four different cities. The Wolverine icers take on the Fighting Irish of Notre Dame in the two-game, total-goals, single elimination series in South Bend. THE IRISH gained the home-ice ad- vantage by winning the tie-breaker (head-to-head competition) after finishing deadlocked with the Wolverines for fourth place. To achieve the tie, last weekend Michigan lost twice to regular-season champion, Bowling Green, while Notre Dame split with ninth-place Western Michigan. It took a'noble Irish effort to take Saturday's game, a 10-8 shootout. High-scoring Notre Dame suffered a crucial knee injury to leading scorer, Dave Poulin, in that game. His status for this weekend is questionable. The Irish, however, are quite able to score without him, as no less than nine skaters have scored 25 points or more. No more than three Wolverine icers have done as much. NOTRE DAME is quite dangerous at home; since November the Irish are 9- 4 in the Athletic and Convocation Cen- ter. Two years ago, when the two teams last met during post-season play, Notre Dame invaded Yost Arena and wiped out the Wolverines, 11-7, in the first round of the Western Collegiate playof- fs. The Irish hold the season edge over Michigan, winning one game and tying another during regular conference play, and adding another win during the Great Lakes Invitational Tournament in Detroit over Christmas time. BOTH TEAMS boast depth in goal, with two goalies per squad seeing ac- tion. The Irish serve up junior Bob Mc- Namara (4.13 gaa) and senior Dave Laurion (4.13 gaa), while the Wolverines feature freshman Jon Elliott (3.33 gaa) and senior Peter Mason (3.03 gaa). Leading the Michigan scoring corps are defenseman Steve Richmond (6- 29-35), and linemates Ted Speers (21- 13-34) and Brad Tippett (13-20-33). Michigan (18-13-5 overall; 14-12-4 CCHA) and Notre Dame (20-14-2 overall; 15-13-2 CCHA) face-off tonight and tomorrow night at 7:30 p.m. In other first-round CCHA action, Bowling Green hosts Northern Michigan, Lake Superior travels to Michigan State, and Ferris State visits Michigan Tech. GREAT A LITTLE WRITING STARTSWIl LISTENING,A LITTLE I rH ER, When the guys at Miller asked me to write an ad on writing, I said, "Forget it. Not even if you held a gun to my head' So they held a bottle of Lite Beer to my mouth. They're a pretty persuasive group. THUGS TO MUGS If you're going to write anything, know what you're talking about. 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Experience has shown me that in mystery writing, the sexier the dames, the better. Experience has also shown me that sexy scenes make great punctuation marks. This is where research has the greatest potential. Use your own discretion in this matter. But when you write about it, don't be too explicit. That way, your reader gets to paint a more vivid picture. CAPER TO PAPER O.K., you've got your characters, loca- tions, and dames lined up. Now comes the good part: Putting your caper to paper. There's no mystery to it. As long as you write the ending first, the rest will.follow. Write short, terse, to-the-point sentences. Be as clear as possible. And make sure you've got the right stuff around for when you get thristy. After all, writing is pretty thirsty work. I suggest a couple of mugs of Lite Beer- who ever heard of a caper that didn't involve a couple of mugs? Why Lite Beer? 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