________________The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, March 21, 2001-R-- 9 *State cuts gymnastics program .or TiteX By Swapnil Patel Daily Sports Writer Nothing in life is guaranteed. The No. 6 Michigan State men's gymnastics team currently feels the impact of the previous statement as it competes in its final season. Usually when athletes commit to a school, they assume that they are guaranteed four years of collegiate competition. But the decision made by the Michigan State athletic department to cut a program that has existed since 1946, leads one to believe otherwise. Last Friday's competition against Michigan was perhaps one of the last meets ever for the Spartans - as will be this weekend's Big Ten Championships at College Park. Of the 11 Big Ten teams, only 6 will have a men's gymnastics team next year. "State losing it's program is really sad," Michigan sophomore gymnast Conan Parzuckowski said. "Gym- nastics, especially men's gymnastics isn't a popular sport. Sure you see it every four years in the Olympics, but otherwise it just fades away. In a 0-sport with really no professional league, college is the last place where an athlete can fine tune." Initially, the athletic department cited differences in the female ath- lete population percentage in rela- tion to the University's overall female population percentage. For example, Title IX, the federal law : enacted in 1972, states that if women comprise say 48% of the , University's student body, then 'M' heads to nationals with high expectations BRANDON SEDLC The Michigan State gymnastics team will not be celebrating any more wins after this season when the program is cut. 48% of all student athletes should be women. In essence, Title IX hopes to ensure equality for women. Apparently, the two percentages did not equal each other. Of the options that existed, to either add more women's varsity teams or cut some of the men's programs, Michi- gan State chose to cut its men's gymnastics program in order to comply with the Title IX require- ments. "Title IX is a great law, but it is poorly written and horribly (inter- preted)," Michigan State Head Coach Rick Atkinson said. Michigan State junior Jonathan Plante, who is the nation's top- ranked gymnast on the pommel horse, is investigating the matter further and after doing some of his own research, Plante proposed his calculations of the required percent- ages to Associate Director of Ath- letics Shelly Appelbaum. "Upon discussing the situation with Shelley Appelbaum, the first reason given was the participation (ratio)," Plante said. "However when I ran current participation rea- sons by her, the reason changed to the scholarship-funding problem." And in a discussion with Michi- gan State's Vice President Fred Pos- ton, Plante was told that financial issues led to the decision to termi- nate the program. "His reason was that they needed our money (team budget, scholar- ship, salaries) in order to fund more scholarships for female athletics - purely a financial reason," Plante said. "However this was not the rea- son expressed to other groups involved in the decision process. So as of this date, we have no concrete reason for terminating the pro- gram." Since the law also calls for a fair distribution of scholarships funds available for student athletes, its involvement in the decision making process makes sense. The ,Michigan State gymnasts have responded as well as they can, but for some, the entire situation has been discouraging - especially the way Michigan State's athletic department has dealt with it. For Instance, the University seemed to go out of its way to keep the football players updated of the situation when former Michigan State football head coach, Nick Saban, was choosing to leave. "When Nick Saban left the foot- ball program, President McPherson skipped the dinner for the graduat- ing class to have a private meeting with the football players," Plante said. "As a team, we have not been given the common courtesy of knowing" the exact details of why men's gymnastics was cut. Interestingly, the decision to ter- minate the program was actually made prior to last season, but the gymnasts were given a one-year extension this season to figure out what they were going to do individ- ually. Rather than staying at Michigan State, some gymnasts are looking into transferring to other schools. But even that process gets compli- cated because they may risk losing their current scholarships. Transfer- ring their academic credits is yet another issue that Spartan gymnasts encounter. "If they maintain eligibility, the school will hold up their end of the bargain. The scholarships will be intact - just that there will be no gymnastics," Atkinson said. By Kristen Fidh Daily Sports Writer The buck stops here. "This is why we train six months out of the year," assistant men's swimming coach Eric Namesnik said. This weekend, eight swimmers and one diver from the No. 9 Michi- gan men's swimming and diving team will travel to College Station, Texas for the NCAA Tournament. After claiming the runner-up posi- tion behind No. 8 Minnesota a month ago at the Big Ten Champi- onship, the Wolverines have set a realistic goal - they want a top-10 national finish. According to Michigan's coaches, the title will most likely go to either No.1 Texas or No.2 Stanford -both of which the Wolverines have met, and lost to, this season. "It should be a good dual meet between Texas and Stanford for the top spot, with the rest of us fighting underneath them," Michigan coach Jon Urbanchek said. "We will meet Minnesota again, and, based on what they showed at Big Tens, they should definitely be in the top four or five." Michigan's goal could very well be accomplished with 12 races and one relay posing top-20 seeds - along with diver Jason Coben adding points. "If they gave out medals based on seedings, we would have a couple and walk away happy," Urbanchek said. "But the point of all of this is to show it in the pool." HANG ON TIGHT: Junior Tim Sicil- iano is the defending champion in the 400-yard individual medley. With a No.2 seed and a qualifying time that broke the Big Ten record, he is in a good position to take the crown again after a full recovery from his early-season shoulder injury. WELCOME FRESHMAN: Seeded first in the 200 freestyle because of his record-tying performance at .the conference championships, Big Ten Freshman of the Year Dan Ketchum is on the road to stardom. In addi- tion, he is seeded fifth in the 500 free and 15th in the 1,650 free.: AWESOME FOURSOME: Michigan's 800-freestyle relay is a top con- tender for the crown with a three seed. The quartet of Jordan Watland, Ketchum, Chris Thompson and Gar- rett Mangieri took the conference title and wouldn't mind a matching national plaque. DUE TIME: Thompson has an Olympic bronze medal but not an NCAA title - he has placed second in the 1,650 freestyle for the past three years. "I sure would get tired of second place after three years," Urbanchek said. An impressive finishing time is not nearly as significant to the senior as a win for his final race as a Wolverine. LAST HURRAH: Senior captain Scott Werner will also represent Michigan for his last time, swim- ming in three individual races. As an All-American in the highly-competi- tive breaststroke, he is expeoted to place in the top eight in they 200. Points could also come from good times in the 100 breast and 200 indi- vidual medley. DIVING SAVES THE DAY: A cpuple good scores for Coben would give Michigan the points needed for the finish it hopes for - provided the freshman's elbow is pain-free. Other races for which the Wolver- ines qualified include the 200 back- stroke, 100 backstroke, 100 freestyle, 200-medley relay, 400- medley relay and 400-freestyle relay. "All of our guys are seasoned swimmers with experience compet- ing at a very high level," Namesnik said. "Now it's just a matter of tak- ing care of business - defending our positions." Louisville, KFC try to land Grizzlies LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - The owner of the Vancouver Grizzlies has been offered $100 million from the parent company of KFC to bring his franchise to Louisville, two local law- makers said. Heisley wants to move his team out of Canada, where he's losing millions. Louisville is one of the cities in the running to land the NBA team. Ana- heim, Calif.; New Orleans and Mem- phis, Tenn. are the others. Louisville-based Tricon Global Restaurants would pay Grizzlies owner Michael Heisley $5 million a year for 20 years, according to Reps. Larry Clark and Mary Lou Marzian. KFC would contribute millions in exchange for naming rights. Company officials want to call the arena the KFC Bucket and the team the Kentucky Colonels, the name of Louisville's former ABA franchise. Tennessee hoops @ coach Green axed KNOXVILLE, Tenn (AP) - Ten- nessee men's basketball coach Jerry Green resigned yesterday following a 22-11 season and a trip to the NCAA Tournament. Green, who led Tennessee to four consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances, agreed to a $1.25 million buyout. Green was 89-36 in four seasons, the best winning percentage since Ray Mears, who coached from 1962-77. The Vols were 20-9 in Green's first season and have won at least 20 games each year he coached. Tennessee had not posted consecutive 20-win season since Don DeVoe from 1981-85. Tennessee went to the round of 16 last season for the first time in school history. Tennessee will pursue Rick Pitino, Illinois coach Bill Self, Mississippi coach Rod Barnes and Tim Floyd of the NBA's Chicago Bulls. 'M' nine set for home opener, Ralston ready for season debut By Job Sin or Daily Sports Writer Last season, senior tri-captain Bryce Ralston could only watch from the dugout as the Michigan baseball team struggled to a 20-32- 1 overall record and a 10-18 Big Ten mark. The senior right-hander from Tacoma, Wash. suffered a season- ending arm injury prior to the beginning of action last year. He underwent "Tommy John" surgery on March 9th of last year. Tomorrow, Ralston will again take the ball for the Wolverines (6-8 overall) as they play host to St. Joseph's in their home opener. Two years ago, Ralston finished the season 8-1 with a 3.54 ERA in a season in which Michigan cap- tured the Big Ten Tournament title. "We'll find out tomorrow how he responds," Michigan coach Geoff Zahn said. "He is pretty much on schedule for where we wanted him." However, when easing back a pitcher from injury it is critical to give him time. Early in the season it makes little sense to push pitch- ers into the late innings. "We've got enough pitching to finish a game," Zahn said. Ralston "is only going to go two innings." The two-inning limit Zahn will be enforcing on Ralston is not based on concern over his recovery. "I think his arm will be pretty close," Zahn said. "His endurance is a bit behind." While junior right-hander Bobby Korecky has already thrown two complete games, Zahn is not antici- pating long outings from all of his hurlers. "Some guys who haven't pitched lately will pitch," Zahn said. A prime candidate to relieve Ral- ston tomorrow will be senior Vince Pistilli. Thus far, Pistilli has thrown JOBS!!! Summer Term Apply nn at the Law Library- * non-Law Students a T1 aY-1Inmc 9.1 innings, a meager amount in contrast to Korecky's 31.2 innings. Another major reason for limit- ing Ralston's outing tomorrow stems from the fact that Michigan is scheduled to travel to Iowa for three games with the Hawkeyes this weekend. Were Ralston to over-exert him- self, he could be out of commission for the weekend. "If two innings is his max, we'll use him in relief this weekend," Zahn said. Ralston and the rest of the staff will look for continued run sup- port. The Michigan bats have been hot lately, producing an average of five runs in three contests over the weekend. The much-improved sophomore thirdbaseman, Brock Koman, along with outfielder Gino Lollio, direct- ed the charge for the Wolverines. Koman currently has 22 hits to lead the team. "He hit well for a good part of last year," Zahn said. "He is doing what he expected and what I expected. He is also playing good third base." Today's meeting will be the first ever between St. Joseph's and Michigan. FISHER STADIUM Who: Michigan (6-8) vs. St. Joseph's(Ind.) (9-7) When:3 p.m. Latest: Bryce Ralston is expected to take the mound for the first time since undergo- ing arm surgery. Food for Thought The US Embargo Many accuse the US embargo of unfairly crippling Vietnam. According to UNICEF, Vietnam is the world's largest exporter of rice, but one-third of its children go hungry. Gary Lillie & Assoc., Realtors www.garylillie.com USE THE DAILY TO WIPE THAT LOOK OFF YOUR FACE Computers and the Shaping ofPublic Opinion Deliberative Polls ...and the potential for extendinthem using computer systems James S. Fishkin & obert C. Luskin, University of Texas, Austin Democratic Deliberation on the Internet Vincent E. Price, Marsh Visiting Professor Friday, March 23@3:00 in 6050 ISR Reception to follow in 6080 ISR Sponsored by Communication Studies and The Center for Political Studies The Office of New Student Programs is now recruiting Fall and Internationale Orientation Leaders ONSP is looking for motivated undergraduate students to help facilitate the Fall and International Orientation Programs. Leader duties will include running check-in and registration, facilitating an informational meeting, leading a walking tour, participating in social activities, and assisting in class registration. Pay: $65/day, $32.50/half-day (shifts vary). International Orientation Training: Thursday, August 23rd Program: August 24th - August 28th Fall Orientation Training: Monday, August 27th Prorm Anmuust 2Rth - August 30th NCAA men Yesterday's results (NIT) PURDUE 79, Auburn 61 ALABAMA 79, Toledo 69 : MEMPHIS 90, Texas l Paso 65 Pepperdine at New Mexico, inc. Today's games (NIT) Detroit at Dayton, 7:30 p.m. Tulsa at Mississippi State, 9:30 p.m. Tomorrow's games (NCAA) USC vs. Kentucky 7:38 p.m. Georgetow vs. Maryland, 7:55 p.m. UC vAus nuha 10-03 nm. {_ . _ , '::