Page 8C - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 5, 1985 WILCHER GAINS ALL-AMERICA Winning is name of game for tracksters By STEVE HERZ Over the past decade the men's track team has fallen into something of a rut. Each year the squad is among the nations best and it consistently sports one or two All-Americans. LAST YEAR was no different. Thomas Wilcher, who has made a habit of jumping atop linebackers on the gridiron, instead jumped the 110- meter hurdles. Wilcher did it well enough to finish third in the nation and gained All-American status. Other than Wilcher, Michigan did no't fare was well as it had in the past. Assistant coach Ron Warhurst wasn't disappointed, however: "Anytime you go to the Nationals you're in a very elite group of people," he said. Warhurst has reason to call these people "elite". After last year's nationals, a couple of these elites, Carl Lewis and Joaquim Cruz, walked off with several gold medals in Los Angeles after cleaning up at the NCAA s. Assistant coach Mike Shea, former Big Ten champion himself, commen- ted, "They were up against some hot competition." THE ARKANSAS Razorbacks have been an inferno recently, winning all three track championships last season. Warhurst could not recall the last team to capture an NCAA triple crown. While Arkansas has been making things difficult for the rest of the nation, some Wolverines were paving their own successful road. Chris Brewster just missed making the finals in the 10,000 meters, finishing in 13th place nationally. Quarter milers Todd Steverson and Omar Davidson also came within decimal points of the finals. Davidson, now just a sophomore, showed greate poise and impressed his coaches with hisT inaugural campaign. "He had a hell of a freshman year," said Shea. INDEED, he did. Davidson was among the top two freshman quarter milers in the nation. Both he and Steverson, a senior, are strong All- American candidates for the up- coming season. Despite losing Vince Bean and several other top competitors to graduation, Warhurst is optimistic for the upcoming season. "We're going to be a lot stronger than we were last year," he said. "Indiana (1984 Big Ten champion) is losing a lot of points. (Track coach) Jack Harvey is bringing in some fine athletes next year." Warhurst predic- ted that Michigan would show greatest improvement in the field events, which proved to be the team's nemesis in '84, since the team recruited heaviest in this area over the past year. THE TEAM'S success is especially impressive considering the tough academic standards the school main- tains and the cold Ann Arbor climate. Warhurst acknowledged, "You can't get everybody. Some sprinters want to go south and if they don't have the grades we can't touch them." Opposing schools are not shedding any tears for the Wolverines. As Warhurst noted, "For ten straight years now, we have been in the nationals." From Butch Woolfolk in the 200- meter dash to Vince Bean in the long jump, football players have had an impact on the track program. This year will be no different. "We'll be waiting for some of Bo's recruits for some help," Warhurst said last spring. And the help from the football team That competition was a different story. While Henry's expectations were still present, the impressive per- formances were not, unless Henry considers sixth place indoors and eighth outdoors impressive. The coach's optimism was toned down considerably after the indoor season. Heading into the Big Ten out- doors, he skeptically admitted, "I would be more than happy with third place." Wilcher ... jumping linebackers and hurdles has helped spell success for Michigan. Call it comraderie, call it what you will. Jack Harvey calls it winning. And he calls it by no other name. Women search for optimism If he had ever seen the women's track team run last year Henry Block (of H & R Block) probably would have had trouble coming up with any reasons for success. But another Henry, James Henry, the first-year women's coach, had no trouble with optimism prior to last season. "WE HAVE every reason to expect impressive performances both in- doors and outdoors," Henry said before seeing his team face off again- st the rest of the Big Ten. ALTHOUGH the overall team has not proven to be a strong unit, several individuals have garnered attention. Senior Sue Schroeder begins the new year as one of the Big Ten's premier long-distance runners. She proved her worth by qualifying for the NCAA finals last season in both the 3,000 and 5,000 meters. Joyce Wilson, a senior, holds enough school records for an autobiography. In addition to her long list of laurels, she was an Olympic and an NCAA qualifier. ENTERING with Henry last year was a strong group of freshman. Last year he said, "The newcomers mays determine how well we do this season." With a year of inter- collegiate experience behind them, those newcomers may help the program turn the corner to success. Losing is not something to which Henry is accustomed. A former Big Ten long jump record-holder, Henry brought success to the track program as a competitor here, and he hopes to do the same as coach. Henry only loses two key runners to graduation, and he has already com- pensated by signing several blue-chip prospects within the state for the up- coming year. James Henry's optimism is a big enough reason to expect success in the future. Besides, H & R Block should stick to tax returns. - STEVE HERZ 0 Wilson ...an Olympic and NCAA qualifier Linksters finish high at Big Tens By MARK KOVINSKY The general consensus drawn by those close to the men's golf scene last spring was that the Wolverines were just plain average. But if not for some late heroics, Michigan probably would not have even qualified as that. After finishing in the bottom half of the pack in four of their six regular season tournaments (with their best finishes coming at the Marshall In- vitational in West Virginia and the Kepler Invitational in Ohio where they placed seventh and eighth, respectively, the Wolverines retur- ned to the University of Michigan Golf Course for the Big Ten Championship and worked the home turf to their ad- vantage. The Wolverines fired a team total of 1,519 strokes in the four-day event, low enough for a third place finish behind Ohio State (1,474) and Purdue (1,516). %-l-l %-./ "I can't say enough about the effort Danny has given us the last three years," said Carras of his three-time team captain. "We look to him to be our team leader every year and he comes through for us." To say Roberts carried the Michigan golf team in 1985 is an un- derstatement. The 5-9, 160-pound Yp- silanti native averaged 75.1 strokes over 21 rounds this season, 1.5 strokes better than his nearest teammate - junior Peter Savarino of Ann Arbor. Savarino has shown a great deal of improvement since his freshman year when he averaged close to 83, and if he continues to develop in the coming months, he should pick up right where Roberts left off. ANOTHER Wolverine junior with promise for next year is Chris West- fall of Grosse Pointe Farms. Westfall grabbed the second best score for Michigan at the Big Ten Champion- ship with 309 as well as finishing up third on the team in stroke average at 77.9. That average is up slightly from 1984, but if his short game comes together, things could change. Two sophomores, Scott Chipokas and Jon Rife, also saw a lot of playing time for Carras this season. Although both were in their second year academically at Michigan, neither was with the team in his freshman year. Of the two, Chipokas played the bigger role, playing 18 rounds and carding the fourth best average on the squad at 78. And with his great short game and some time to mature, Chipokas will definitely be a key player for the Wolverines in the future. In fact, the only other player who will not return when Jim Carras begins his fourth season at the helm in 1986 is Ken Clark. The Grand Rapids senior saw his playing time limited compared to 1984, and his stroke average rise as a result. Clark averaged 79.8 (up from 79 in 1984), but saved his best golf for last. At the Big Ten Championship, Clark came in at a solid 310 with a closing round of 75, his best on the year. 0I Daiy Photo by DAN HABIB Good starts and determination propelled Jack Harvey's Wolverines to a fourth-place finish at the Big Ten Championships last spring. Seven Wolverines qualified for the NCAAs. A defense against cancer can be cookedup in your kitchen. Fruits, vegetables, and whole- Only direction is up for women's golf grain cereals such as oatmeal, bran and wheat may help lower the risk of colorectal cancer. Foods high in fats, salt- or nitrite-cured foods like ham, and :.. . fish and types of sausages smoked by tradi- Roberts ... ace linkster There is evidence that diet and cancer are related. Some foods may promote cancer, while others may protect you from it. Foods related to lower- ing the risk of cancer of the larynx and esophagus all have high amounts of carotene,. a form of Vitamin A which is in cantaloupes, peaches, broccoli, spinach, all dark green leafy vegetables, sweet potatoes, carrots, pumpkin, } winter squash and tomatoes, . citrus fruits and brussels CONSIDERING the team's so-so performances prior to that tour- nament, head coach Jim Carras had to be pleased with his golfers' efforts at the Big Tens. But of no one was he more proud than senior Dan Roberts. Roberts, an All-Big Ten selection in 1983, pumped a four-over par 292 along the 6,865-yard layout, earning him the runer-up medalist position behind Ohio State's Clark Burroughs, All-Big Ten honors for a second time, and a trip to the NCAA Championship in Grenelefe, Florida.aRoberts was not as fortunate at Grenelefe, however. In missiing the cut, he ballooned to a pair of opening round 80s before carding a season low 71 in his last round at the college level. By MARK KOVINSKY For the women's golf team, the climb from obscurity and its peren- nial last-place position in the Big Ten is at least one year, a wish and a prayer away. Despite vast improvement under fourth-year head coach Sue LeClair, the Wolverines are still trying to get the program off the ground. Over the past two seasons, the squad has taken over seven strokes off its tournament average (from 89 in 1982 to 81.5 in 1984), but nevertheless found ' itself buried in last place in early May at the Big Ten Championship in Bloomington, Indiana. THE REST OF the team's schedule, which was completed back in the fall, did not produce much better results. Other than a third-place finish at the Notre Dame Invitational, the women fired their way to near-last in each of the six tournaments in which they competed. But if nothing else, LeClair can find comfort in the fact that all of her players will be returning this fall. Leading the way for the Wolverines will be junior Bridget Syron. Syron tied for low score (76) and low-stroke average (84.7) over 15 rounds. Sophomore Sandy Barron matched that average while another sophomore, Valerie Madill, had the second best average at 85.4. Two other sophomores, Missy Bauer and Lisa Di Matteo, also figured prominently for the Wolverines along with junior Luanne Cherney. Another plus for LeClair is the return of redshirt Kim Wojcikiewicz. Wojcikiewicz sat out her freshman year following knee surgery, and has just recently regained her strength. In fact, LeClair indicated she could step right into the lineup if all goes well this summer. But by far the biggest edge the Wolverines will have in 1985 will come in their two most important tour- naments - the Lady Northern Inter- collegiate Invitational and the Big Ten Championship. In both instances, the University of Michigan Golf Cour- se will serve as the host site. tic 1 f r f 1 log f. 12 - millio high c onal methods should be eaten in moderation. Be moderate in consumption of alco- hol also. A good rule of thumb is cut down on fat and don't be fat. Weight reduction may wer cancer risk. Our year study of nearly a n Americans uncovered ancer risks particularly people 40% or more ght. sprouts. r f 1 " Two convenient campus locations - Eleven NBD 24-hour Banker locations - Experienced help with Guaranteed Student Loans " No-service-charge checking with $299 minimum statement balance; $5 monthly service fee if 1a ...... v is_ = ri_ .. _ /+nw. Foods that may help reduce the risk of gastrointestinal among overweig Now. more than ever, we i.5 I