18A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 22, 1998 'M' women's golf heads south to finish fall Short game is key element if Wolverines are to compete with Michigan State Grind Sharat Raju By Nita Srivastava Daily Sports Writer The Michigan women's golf team is looking for a peak performance in its last tournament of the fall season at the Notre Dame Invitational in Bonita Springs, Fla. The goal is to implement every- thing the Wolverines have learned from the previous tournaments into the competition this weekend. Throughout the season, Michigan has been struggling with inconsis- tency and an inexperienced line-up. Each practice and competition has helped to improve tournament scores. "I think we have so much ability," Michigan coach Kathy Teichert said. "I'm looking forward to this week- end to see what the fall season has done for our team - I'm hoping we really shine." High scoring averages in previous tournaments can be attributed to the inconsistency of the short game in particular. Since the Wolverine Invitational earlier this month, Michigan has been focusing on mod- ifying the short game. In the qualifiers for this week- end's competition, Teichert said she noticed improvements in the short game - as well as lower scores. Teichert said the reason for this is that the players are getting the ball closer to the hole sooner, so there is not as much pressure to sink a long putt. "Seventy-five percent of our practices have been devoted to the short game," freshman Misia Lemanski said. "We have definitely benefited a lot from it." As of now, the Wolverines do not know much about the course that they will be playing. Teichert said that because the tournament is being held in Florida, there will probably be a great deal of water and sand. The course should be relatively flat with a few palm trees. Rain and heat could be a factor this weekend as well, but it doesn't appear to be too much of a concern for the Wolverines. "We have played pretty decently in rain here and any good team real- ly should be able to play in rain or shine," Lemanski said. "As for the heat, it shouldn't wear us out too much because we are only playing for two days." Six Wolverines will be participat- ing in this competition: Lemanski, Sharon Park, Bess Bowers, Jen Baumann, Trish Watkins and Stephanie MacAdams. MacAdams, a freshman, will be making her college debut this week- end. MacAdams said that in the qual- ifiers this week everything seemed to click, which was why she was select- ed to travel this weekend. "Stephanie played very well in the qualifiers, and we are just hoping that maybe she has been our missing catalyst this season," Teichert said. MacAdams said she is looking to use the skills that she has learned from teammates who have already competed this season to improve her performance. "I have seen how they all have such a great attitude and every shot they try their best. I want to con- tribute in the same way," MacAdams said. While it is not expected that Michigan will win the tournament, the Wolverines are expecting to show their improvement. "We are planning on going out there, focusing on believing in each other and ourselves," Lemanski said. "Every time the goal is to win, but in this particular tournament, we just want to peak, to do the best we have all season." As of now, the team that poses the biggest threat for the Wolverines is Michigan State. "Michigan State is a great team, but we have a lot of young players that have just as much potential as Michigan State," Lemanski said. "Hopefully in the spring we will be able to compete better with them." "8 Fratemft y makes rnk deciingetsMud own on State Street sits Schembechler Hall. Named after the legendary coach following his retirement, it's a pleasantly modern building that hou es the football offices, athletic department rooms, various trophies and a museum dedicated to Michigan sports. Upstairs, there is a large lounge that looks across the athletic campus. Huge photographs of famous alumni - Gerald Ford, James Earl Jones, Arthur Miller, etc. -- adorn the right-hand wall as you enter the blue-colored room, often used for press conferences. Across the walls in the room hang professionally taken photos of the buildings - athletic or otherwise - beautified by a sunset in one, or a vibrant crowd in another or some spring flowers along the sides. But on one wall sits a picture of a different nature. In it, a girl wearing a yell sweatshirt and a pair of dark shorts is perched in a menacing stance, her forearms resting across her thighs. No one else is in focus, but people can be seen standing in the background. There is one thing, the only thing, that makes this picture instantly recognizable. Mud. The picture is from some Mud Bowl of the past, dated only by the fact that it is in color. The athlete is covered in mud. Across her face, on her sweatshirt, on her shorts - everywhere. There is no ground, either - it is just a muddy mess, enveloping the bottom half of her feet. This is Mud Bowl, encapsulated in one photo. Within these hallowed halls, where the legends of Michigan football are dis- played prominently throughout the building, where sports accomplishments are immortalized - the one non-varsity athletic campus tradition enshrined is the Mud Bowl. For 65 years, people have gathered around the field at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house at the corner of Washtenaw and South University to watch two rival frater- nities duke it out in a game that can truly be called 'football.' Two sororities play each other during halftime, and that is even more brutal than when the guys play. There is one simple reason why it is truly football: Phi Delta Theta, the neigh- boring frat, and SAE just absolutely hate each other. It's a hatred borne of some ancient feud, a Hatfield-versus-McCoy, Montagues- versus-Capulets-style fight. It's a Who-cares-when-it-started, but we-won't-stop mentality. Consider the street-blocking brawl between the two frats that erupted just two weeks ago. Now, I know that Phi Delt has been kicked off campus for the unfortunate events that surrounded the sudden death of LSA first-year student Courtney Cantor last week. I don't know whether their expulsion is right or wrong - there is a lot more involved than I know to make a fair comment. I don't know whether it is right or wrong that they're not going to be SAE's opponent on Saturday or ever again. I don't know if it's right or wrong that a fraternity should attempt to be alcohol- free. I'm not in the Greek system and don't know the impact or effect such a move can make. But I do know that one absolutely positive and insightful plan has sprung in 0 light of this whole tragedy. SAE decided in a meeting last night that a portion of the profits from sponsors will go directly to the Cantor family and the fund it established after Courtney died. Mud Bowl will still be played this Saturday. As early as yesterday morning, there was some question whether Mud Bowl will or will not happen. Maybe it would be canceled. Maybe they would just play on as if nothing happened over the past week. Maybe this, maybe that. In one deft move, however, SAE has done the following things: 1. Respectfully paid homage to a tragic, Greek-life-related incident. 2. Dissuaded the myth that fraternities and sororities isolate themselves from the world around them. 3. Proved that fraternities do more than binge drink and party. 4. Behaved pro- actively, turning a negative into a positive. It's a rare turn of events, worthy of praise. SAE - a Greek organization that does not compete in the philanthropic Greek Week - apparently has a reputation as an 'Animal House'-type frat. Being outside the Greek system, I don't know too much about the reputations that fraternities have. But if I were a casual observer, I would think that SAE is the most intelligent fraternity on campus. While the interviews were going on at the Daily, I overheard yesterday that one sorority member said something to the effect of, Of course Mud Bowl is going on since Courtney's death had nothing to do with it. True, it did not specifically have to do with Mud Bowl. But that kind of atti- tude and response is what would have been typical: "Well, it didn't happen here, so let's not worry about it." Thankfully, SAE did not make this mistake. They do have to worry about it - all fraternities and sororities have to be mindful of this tragedy, since it is Greek- life related. The stance that SAE is taking is, Yes, we realize that last week's incident was a terrible thing - but we are doing something about it in an effort to move onward That's refreshing. Hopefully, other fraternities and sororities will be as responsible and follow suit. - Sharat Raju can be reached via e-mail at sraju@umich.edu &y aA I