Page 8--The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - February 11, 1991 Men gymnasts tumble to Ohio State by Charlie Wolfe Daily Sports Writer The cheers and applause rained down in a hail storm of emotion, reverberating in every corner of the arena. A sea of proud supporters paid homage to those who had competed so fiercely in this rare homestand. This was the scene Friday evening at Keen Arena. The Michigan men's and women's gymnastics teams were battling Ohio State, and the Wolverine faithful re- peatedly showed their appreciation in deafening fashion. The electricity of a co-ed meet, the thirst of the crowd to see the home teams in action; surely there couldn't be a loser on such a night. But such are the evils of competition. Someone must prevail, so despite an inspired effort, the Wolverine men were unable to fend off the Buckeyes by a score of 280.80-275.75. "(Ohio State) did very well, but this is a great meet for our guys," Michigan coach Bob Darden said. "We're a high 270 team, that's where we should be at this point in the season, so it's a real plus for the guys that they could pull together and really drive the score up." Performances by Ruben Ceballos (9.45) and Mike Mott (9.30) on the pommel horse, and Ben Verrall (9.50) and Royce Toni (9.40) in the floor exercise, left Michigan trailing 92.75-92.70 after two events. However, Michigan experienced some trouble in the vault and on the rings, while Ohio State pulled away in virtually every subsequent event. "We should've beat them, but we can't look back anymore," Verrall said. "We had them for a while, we just screwed up, we missed." Buckeye Rusty Schillinger won the all-around com- petition with a 57 for all six events. Verrall led all Wolverines with a 55.65, good for fourth place, while co-captain Jim Round took fifth at 53. 65. But as family, friends, and the gymnasts mingled af- ter the meet, it was Toni who was wearing the biggest smile of all. The rookie turned in season bests on both the horizontal (9.55) and parallel bars (9.65). "I'm excited, totally, I guess," he said. "When the place is packed and everybody's screaming, no matter what, it makes you feel great." Charles the Great ^P"h* Charles Barkley of the Philadelphia 76'ers slams home two of his 17 points in yesterday's NBA All-Star Game in Charlotte. Barkley also hauled down 22 rebounds. The East defeated the West, 116-114. PRIZES! come in costume, come as you are! .996-9191 FREE 3* "sae9 MASKS & BEADS (Hey, Mister! Throw me something!) Allons a la Louisiane! (c'est Mardi Gras, cher!) A Fat Tuesday Party at Ashley's! TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12 7:00 P.M. - 1:00 A.M. " Bacchus Punch! - Raw Bar, Oysters, Shrimp, Crawfish! - Cajun Beer Specials! " LIVE JAZZ! Johnny Lawrence Quartet with special guest Morris Lawrence! Chase the blues! Laissez le bon temps rouler at Ashley's Fat Tuesday Party! Wolverine gymnast Jim Round competes on the rings during this weekend's 180.8 -175.75 loss to Ohio State. Women break record, defeat Buckeyes by Andy Stabile Daily Sports Writer Two weeks ago in its home de- but, the Michigan women's gym- nastics team left the friendly con- fines ofKeen arena with a new school record. Saturday night, the big crowd at Keen was treated to an encore per- formance, as the Wolverines once again broke the school record on their way to defeating Ohio State, 186.35 to 184. Two important factors in the meet were the team's improved performance on the balance beam and the large, vocal crowd. Wolverine sophomore Allison Winski once again lead the charge toward the new record, garnering the highest point total of the meet. "The beam was an improve- ment from some of our previous performances, but their is still room for improvement." Winski said, "It's really the make you or break you event. Lately we've been pretty consistent on the other things, and not on beam." The Wolverines finished the third rotation with a slight lead, finding themselves in a similar sit- uation to their record breaking per- formance of two weeks ago. Once again, Michigan headed to the floor routine sensing victory, know- ing the Buckeyes had to finish the meet on the balance beam. "If we're ahead and going into the floor, we have confidence we'll win," Winski said. "It's a lot harder to perform under pressure on the beam rather than the floor." The large crowd must have sensed the victory as well. Upon the commencement of the floor exercise, the fans began to get vo- cal, cheering the Wolverines on to some exceptional routines. "The crowd was just so loud - it got us so psyched up and excited," Win- ski said. Next week the Wolverines travel to Michigan State to face the host Spartans, nationally ranked Florida, and West Virginia, who beat Michigan last weekend. Although East Lansing doesn't constitute home advantage foP Michigan, it will be the Moutaineers and Gators who feel the strain of the long journey. The meet will provide Michigan with a chance for revenge as well as some of the best in-season compe- tition it will see. If you thought that finding a color Macintosh* system you could afford was just a dream, then the new affordable Macintosh LC is a dream come true. The Macintosh LC is rich in color. Unlike many computers that can display only 16 colors at once, the Macintosh LC expands your palette to 256 colors. It also comes with a microphone and new sound-input technology that lets you personalize your work by adding voice or other sounds.A Like everyMacintosh computer, the LC is easy to set up and easy to master. And it runs thousands of File Edit Input Noteb available applications thatXy Alworkin the same,Yx x consistent way-so once o =2.1)(Bp)[sin(t)+ I]+Y[3,1J8 you've learned one program, you're well on your way to learning them all.The Macintosh LC even lets you share information with someone who uses a different type of computer-thanks to the versatile Apple SuperDrive; which can read from and write to Macintosh, MS-DOS, OS/2, and Apple II floppy disks. Take a look at the Macintosh LC and see what it gives you. Then pinch yourself. It's better than a dream-it's a Macintosh. 0 For more infornation stop by the Computing Resource Center 3rd Floor, School of EducationBuilding k 0