- ~ ---.. . 4B - The M~igan Daily -We ekend*C. Magazine- Thursday, N~chm 15, 2001f 0 0 The Michigan Daily- Weekend, etc. Ma WRESTLING Continued from Page 36 "That's the heavy rope, good luck making it five minutes with that one," 165-pound NCAA qualifier Charles Martelli informed me. Wonderful, the last thing I needed was an additional challenge. While most of the team looked like a bunch of jumping beans, I lasted only about 45 seconds without goofing up. After that I repeatedly started and stopped as my fatigue grew exponen- tially. I wasn't timing it but I do believe that the jump rope session lasted more like 8 or 9 minutes. Quite possible, knowing whom the coach was. "McFarland is famous for five minute goes that last thirty minutes," 125-pound NCAA qualifier A.J. Grant told me. Out of the corner of my eye, I observed Olson, who is famous for his incredible work ethic. The guy simply didn't stop jumping the entire time. No wonder he is the captain. After we finished, I couldn't wait to drink a cooler-full of water. I couldn't imagine that this was only a morning workout. A thorough whooping Aside from raw talent, there is a distinct difference between an all- league wrestler as I was in H.S. and a collegiate stud. All day, I somewhat dreaded the inevitable severity of the afternoon's festivities. The Wolverines wholeheartedly look for- ward to the challenge and opportuni- ty associated with another practice. Even on off days, this team wants to be competing. "It's hard to keep this group off the mat," McFarland said. So as 3:30 p.m. rolled around, I knew that, like it or not, practice would be a doozy. Lucky for me, assistant coach Kirk Trost took me to the equipment room to get me head- gear and kneepads. As we returned, I caught the end of a speech McFarland was giving to his team. "We gotta keep those grades up," McFarland emphatically told his troops. "Last term was excellent but we haven't quite reached our team goal of a 3.0." I was somewhat inspired by the possibility of providing my practice opponent with a surprising amount of competition. - but it was not to be. Though all the members of the team have advantages in techniques, athletic ability, conditioning and pound for pound strength, there was one advantage that I'd possess with my partner. James Gonzalez is a back-up 149-pounder. But despite my 15-pound advantage, Gonzalez pounded on me all practice long. On our feet, Gonzalez would set up his shots and shoot in on my legs in a split second. I could barely react even when I knew he was coming at me. He finished his takedowns extremely fluidly, something that is critical to McFarland. "If you see a guy stopping, you show them how to drive," he said. "The faster you drive through the easier it is to score points and finish. It requires explosive power." As far as I am concerned Gonzalez is a very explosive wrestler. Wrestling behind NCAA-qualifier Mike Kulcyzcki, Gonzalez only appeared in one varsity match this See PRACTICE, Page 58 tc From the Vault Mary-Kate deserves her top bilinj Check out our new international rates. www.KoalaCalting.com/services/igaea 1-800-218-5896 *" Koala Calling koala@atlantic.net TOM 1FELOKAMP/Daiky After a typical grueling workout for the wrestling team, Andy Hrovat and coach Joe McFarland make their way to the lockerroom. _. - ---, Buy the Sunday paper. Read the dassif teds. Send your resume. Wait. NewWay Log on.e ire. At the first Virtual Career Fair, sponsored by your Alumni Career Center, you'll find job opportunities in business, engineering and information technology. No wading through the paper. lust the best jobs for the best people. If you want a great job, the Virtual Career Fair is the place to go. March 12-23, 24 hoUrs a day: www.Umich.edu/~umalumni/ Stay tuned to the Web site for registration details. Increase your chances of getting recruited: fill out resume early, beginning March 5. ALUMNIASSOCIATION Co-sponsored by the University of Michigan Business School, School of Information, UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN College of Engineering, Michigan eProNet and the Ann Arbor IT Zone. thril Step right up to the timeless stars of power pop. In Cheap Trick's world, guitars have five necks, melodies and noise blend perfectly on every song, sweaters with checkerboard patterns are cool and guitar geekl/god Rick Nielson is the Master of Ceremonies. Forget Kiss if you want the kings of trashy-glam, midwestern rock and roll - Live at Budokan is a recording of the 1978 Japanese arena concert that made Cheap Trick into self-pro- claimed "rock monsters." In just ten songs, energy leapt right off the record (the only format in which to truly appreciate all of Live at the music's nuances) and into Budokan the hearts of late Cheap Trick 1970s kids bored Sony/Columbia 1979 with Led Reyuewiedbay Zeppelin. This is Daily Arts Writer what the Sheila McClear teenagers of yes-. teryear were lis- tening to in their El Caminos after the Friday-night football game was over and the partying really began. Live, chief songwriter and guitarist Nielson usually grabs a different gui- . tar from his colorful arsenal for each song, and has been known to casually hand fans a guitar to take home. Cheap Trick is particularly adept at turning catchy pop songs into rip- roaring, arena rocking anthems. "Surrender" remains the best exam- ple of such, with a longing chorus of "surrender, surrender! but don't give yourselfaway." On "I Want You to Want Me", Rob Zander's high, flut- tering voice pleads, "I'll shine up my old brown shoes! put on a brand new shirt/ get home early from work! if you say that you'll love me." On "Goodnight," one can only imagine what the female fans were thinking when Zander suggestively sings, "do you want to do a number with me?" Are Cheap Trick (particularly Nielson-Zander) melodic geniuses a la Lennon-McCartney, or are they just a hard rock band with glitter coursing through their veins? No one will ever know for sure. However, on a clear night, if the moon is out and you look just right, you can see Cheap Trick hard at work somewhere along the road, still gigging away in Austin, Detroit or Tokyo. By Jeff Dickerson TV/New Media Editor Let's face it, Mary Kate was "Full House." Had it not been for the tal- ents of the younger sister, the long running sitcom would have failed within a few weeks (a la "The Michael Richards Show"). How was a show featuring bad acting, horrific writing, and asinine characters able to maintain its stronghold on American culture for eight seasons? Sure that mullet-toting Dave Coulier was amusing at times, but his car- toon voices grew tiresome after a few minutes. Simply put, Mary Kate was why America watched televi- sion. Analyze the opening credit sequence from their hit sitcom "Full House" and look at the order in which the names appear. When who- ever it is who sings the theme song belts out, "when you're lost out there and you're all alone," look at the order of the names of the twins. Why does Mary Kate come first? She is the dominating Olsen. In all but one of the 192 episodes of "Full House," Mary Kate has more screen time than her sister. Episode 52, featuring Stephanie moving into Michelle's room to escape her maniacal older sister DJ, was the one show in which Mar y-Kate Mary Kate did not consume the most screen time. Unfortunately, the more talented Olsen twin had a run in with pneumonia and was unable to act in her usual Shakespearian fashion. Their future endeavors were no different from their early work. The The Olsen twins smile pretty for the camera while their hands get immortaliz Olsen twins are as strong a: with hit movies such as "Bil Dad" and "Switching G They've starred alongside so Hollywood's brightest actors Steve Guttenberg to Martin Yet deep within, a terrible sece I I Sister kept Ashley from winnii By Lyle Henretty Film Editor Mary-Kate Olsen, let me tell you, is a fame-monger and a hanger-on and several other hyphenated words that I simply can't publish in a family oriented paper. She is loathsome and should not be on television, chil- dren's videos, picture books, and, for the love of all that is holy, she should not be part of a lucrative Walmart clothing campaign. She is an untalented rube that has been riding the eloquent coattails of her uber-talented sister, the lovely and charming Ashley Olsen. Ashley was the first hired for the star-making turn as Michelle Tanner on the Emmy-winning pantheon of family television shows, "Full House." Yet Ashley's happiness was placed in a strangle hold by her Joan Crawford-esque shrew of a mother (a woman this reporter would sooner destroy with a staple gun than have a mocha latte with). Mommy Destroy-Ashley's- career-ist held the show's producers hostage with insane demands about how it was "too much work" for a one- year-old girl, and how both daughters should take turns, simply because they look alike. Oh, boo-hoo, Mrs. Olsen, cry me a frickin' river. She's acting, not working in wheat field! How hard is it to look beautiful for the camera (which she certainly did). How many breaks for "feeding" and "napping" does one one-year-old need? Yet the spineless produc- ers caved under the tyrannical pressure of Mary-Kate's "agent." Ashley's solo career was usurped by the lifeless slug that was her sister. How much mail do you suppose ABC received about this? How many people furious over the bait and switch. When Ashley was on screen, giving the thumbs up and saying "dude" (an ad-lib, which puts her on par with Robin Williams and Jonathan Winters) my television sparkled like a diamond that had been spit-shined by a man with sparking siliva. Yet the drab, unintelligible Mary-Kate played her part as if by gunpoint, making even the most plesant sub-plots with Joey and Uncle Jesse play like amateur night at an amateur theater in Amateur Town. While the young Ashley was taken in by the star power of her fellow players (Candice Cameron, my God!) and her sudden rise to stardom, she was virtual- ly unaware of the havoc her mother and twisted sister wreaked on her blossoming career. Why do you think she never won an Emmy? Who should they give it to, her or her sister? How come she never got married? Her sister scared her suitors away, for Ashley could have nothing without Mary-Kate's evil approval. (Yes, I know she's only 13 years old, but you miss my point.) Now that the stone pillar that is Ashley has just launched her own pre-teen magazine, it will come as no shock to you that Mary-Kate has joined her talented, adorable sister on the cover. Ashley, instead of allowing Even the o tinue her v of fil or pC with next Sc and 1 dese