GYMN-L Digest - 10 Jul 1996 to 11 Jul 1996 - Special issue

There are 22 messages totalling 620 lines in this issue.

Topics in this special issue:

  1. GYMN-L Digest - 9 Jul 1996 to 10 Jul 1996 - Special issue (2)
  2. caffeine and calcium
  3. Olympic Gymnasts and College (2)
  4. CBC's Olympic Gymnastics Coverage (CAN)
  5. Unified Team (2)
  6. Olympic Qualifications -- Individuals
  7. Silly posts about US not medaling at Atlanta.
  8. Kathy Johnson/Julianne McNamara (3)
  9. HOME FIELD ADVANTAGE
 10. Wendy
 11. Help!
 12. Dear Gymn Guru...
 13. Possible TV alert
 14. Piskun and hypothetical Unified Team
 15. what happened? (2)
 16. I'm sorry, but this statement really ticked me off!

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Date:    Wed, 10 Jul 1996 08:20:46 -0700
From:    ***@FLASH.NET
Subject: Re: GYMN-L Digest - 9 Jul 1996 to 10 Jul 1996 - Special issue

hello everyone,
with all this talk of olympics, i was wondering, which countries have
qualifified individual gymnasts? I know that The United Kingdom has
qualified two men and two woman. And portugal has qualified a woman, so
what are the others? I know that the team events are important, but I
wanted to see what other countries will be there individually.
thanks
katrinka

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Date:    Wed, 10 Jul 1996 23:58:36 +1000
From:    ***@JCU.EDU.AU
Subject: Re: GYMN-L Digest - 9 Jul 1996 to 10 Jul 1996 - Special issue

Australia is sending a full women's team
and two men. As Andrei Kratsov the Aussie champ is injured (former USSR
gymnast) the men will be Brennon Dowrick and Brett Hudson.

The Rythmic gymnast is Katsumi Takahashi who won 5 Golds at the
Commonwealth games in 94

Thw WAG team has had some changes so this could be wrong,
Ruth Monitz, Joanna Hughes, Lisa Moro, Lisa Skinner, Jenny Smith,
Kristy-Lee Brown (could be injured), Nicole Kantek res-Geniveive Preston
Jade Davidson made the team but has apparently had an injury and had to
withdraw.

Regards Sharyn

Attn Avril - Is NZ sending anyone MAG, WAG or RSG?

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Date:    Wed, 10 Jul 1996 10:04:09 EDT
From:    ***@BIOMED.QUEENSU.CA
Subject: caffeine and calcium

Just a comment about caffeine and calcium;

Caffeine DOES reduce calcium absorption in the body; that is why people who
drink a lot of coffee/coke and have a diet with no milk product have bad
teeth (in Montreal, we see this happening with immigrants/refugees who
'discover' coke once they are here - some cultures do not have much dairy
product in their regular diet).  Of course a cup of coffee or two won't make
that much difference, and 5 cokes on one day as an exception won't either.
However, if you regularly have a lot of caffeine and don't have any milk
product in your regular diet, you might end up with teeth and bone problems.

This information is from an accredited nutritionist.

Anne

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Date:    Wed, 10 Jul 1996 11:53:43 EDT
From:    ***@BBN.COM
Subject: Re: Olympic Gymnasts and College

Meg Heister asks:

>Also I believe Dawes signed a letter of intent for Stanford, but then
>became ineligible ... does being accepted to a school for sports and then
>not being able to compete affect acceptance to school?  How about money
>wise.  No more chance of athletic scholarship has got to mean funds come
>from somewhere else.

Although being a top elite gymnast no doubt did nothing to hurt her
application, the rule at a school like Stanford is supposed to be
that your acceptance doesn't hinge on whether or not you're a
prize catch athletically.  No athletic scholarship presumably
means that she'll go to college like the rest of us do--with
other scholarship funds if she's eligible, with her own money,
and with student loans.

>What is the big attraction of Stanford for girls no
>longer eligible for NCAA?  Do these girls plan to go and train/workout
>with team and just not compete?  I know Stanford is a top school, but do
>some girls chose to go there over a small liberal arts college or and
>Ivy league because of the gymnastics even if they won't be competing for
>the school?

Speaking as an alumna of both U of Chicago (very much like Stanford, but
with a less temperate climate :-)) and Harvard (one of those Ivy
League schools :-)), I can vouch that for many people, Stanford would be
preferable to an Ivy, both socially and educationally.  (No flames,
please; this is a matter of personal preference, not a slur on
any particular school(s).)  I don't recall if Dawes has stated
publically what she plans to major in, but whatever it is might
be a Stanford strength.  If Dawes was attracted to Stanford
to begin with, there's no particular reason for her to switch now,
except perhaps financial difficulties.  All my Stanford alum
friends think as highly of the school as I do of Chicago.

Obligatory gymnastics content:
My own question is, can non-team-member students still get access
to use the gymnastics facilities, so that she could still work out
for her own enjoyment even if she can't compete for the Cardinal?
(If so, this might be another reason for Dawes to stick with Stanford.)

>>Kathy

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Date:    Wed, 10 Jul 1996 11:50:35 +0600
From:    ***@COGNOS.COM
Subject: CBC's Olympic Gymnastics Coverage (CAN)

For those of you in Canada, visit your nearest McDonald's restaurant for
the CBC live coverage schedule for the Olympics.  It looks like they are
not going to be showing men's compulsories live, but they will show
pretty well everything else including the gala (exhibition) live. And
rhythmics too!

And while you're there, don't forget to pick up an Olympic watch for
$7.99. Fifty cents of the proceeds of each watch goes to Canada's
Olympic Team (not necessarily gymnastics).

Regards,

Grace

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Date:    Wed, 10 Jul 1996 13:04:00 EDT
From:    ***@PSUVM.PSU.EDU
Subject: Unified Team

I honestly didn't think that Boginskaya would have made such a team, but
her performance at European's tells otherwise.  My seven would be
Khorkina, Kotchetkova, Galieva, Piskun, Podkopayeva, Boginskaya, and
Chusovitina.  There are so many to choose from, though, including
Mirgordskaya, Fabrichnova, Grosheva, Dolgopolova, Knizhnik, the
Yurkinas, Sheremeta (who would challenge Chuxovitina for that 7th spot),
etc. etc. etc. It just blows my mind to think of the possibilities!  I
think I'm really glad that the republics are competing seperately
now--imagine the gymnasts we'd never get to see in competition--and I
wonder how many great gymnasts we never did see in the past.

And last I heard, Amy Chow was going to Stanford on a gymnastics
scholarship, along with Larissa Fontaine.  Does that Coke ad make Chow
ineligible, and can anyone verify that Larissa is going to compete in
gymnastics?

:) Joy

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Date:    Wed, 10 Jul 1996 14:08:18 -0400
From:    ***@KENT.NET
Subject: Olympic Qualifications -- Individuals

>hello everyone,
>with all this talk of olympics, i was wondering, which countries have
>qualifified individual gymnasts? I know that The United Kingdom has
>qualified two men and two woman. And portugal has qualified a woman, so
>what are the others? I know that the team events are important, but I
>wanted to see what other countries will be there individually.
>thanks
>katrinka
>
If you go to nbc's Olympic home page (www.nbc.olympic.com I think)
and look under gymnastics, somewhere there's a list of
how many athletes are competing for each country.

I can tell you that Canada is sending six gymnasts:  Yvonne Tousek,
Jennifer Exaltacion, Shanyn McEachern, Alan Nolet, Kris Burley,
and Richard Ikeda.

Jordynn

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Date:    Wed, 10 Jul 1996 14:14:42 -0600
From:    ***@ZEPHYR.MEDCHEM.PURDUE.EDU
Subject: Silly posts about US not medaling at Atlanta.

It seems that we (the gymnastics community) now are plain expecting the
US to medal and I have to say that with the home court advantage (i.e.,
look at Spain in 1992) they have alot going for them. Jennifer quickly
came up with several reasons why the US will medal ahead of Team Russia.
I sent several comments back to her privately but I would like to post them
to the list since I think that they could provide discussion material.


1) Russia was without Fab at worlds.


True, but they were also without Galieva, who has improved remarkably and her
performances at recent events only show that she WILL be a top ten threat
in Atlanta. She can add alot more to an already star filled team from the
stary skies of Russia.


2) The US was without top athletes at Worlds and still beat the US.

True. But the athletes that were there were not so dominating as expected.
Granted, the subs which had to come in, though gaining valuable experience,
were not up to par with the likes of Moceanu and Miller. Miller was not at
her best and Moceanu made mistakes, several. Miller and Strug also withdrue
from event finals. All this does support the US as being weakened, but the
Russians were having a bad time of it too. Without Galieva they were
weakened at the margin of victory between the US and Russia was only 0.016
points and the Russia *BEAT* the US in optionals.  It was Khorkina's
mistake (9.3) on beam which cost them the lost to the US in compulsories.

3) The US will have its top athletes in top form for the Games.


Maybe. Maybe Moceanu and Miller will be at top form, but so will the rest of
the world.

Other tidbits include the fact that Russia comes to the Olympics with
a score to settle with the US. They want to finally beat the US and there
will be no better place to do that then in the USA! They are working HARD
to do it, too, and the addition of Fabrichnova to the line-up only proves
that point. They want EVERYTHING they got to go in there and win.


When ROMANIA went to Barcelona, they had one objective on everyones mind. They
*HAD* to beat the US and they did it. It was a pride issue. Russia comes
to the US with same goal. Along with fact that they are the only CIS federation
which could defend the Olympic gold, they are going to go all out. They won't
hold back, and they have nothing to loose since people have this myth that
the Russians are the forth best team in the world.


Russia also has the added avantage of actually competing in team situations
far more that the US. They know what it is like to have to get the job done.
They competed in Europeans and the recent meet in Italy as teams. The US
lacks this and, as everyone knows thanks to what K. JOhnson-Clarke said
on WWoS, lacks a team unity system.

Compounded by their recent results at Worlds, Europeans, and various other
meets, this team could be the big threat to the 'big three', so don't
take them for granted, or assume, therefore, that US is simply better.
When comparing the US athletes to the Russians, the russians sometimes
are better. And they have two individual event gold medalists to prove it.
How many does the US have?


Jeff

Dina, Dina, Dina.

I may be wrong, the Russians could get passed by the US and the Ukraine,
but imagine if they passed the US? All heck would break loose in the
Dome.

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Date:    Wed, 10 Jul 1996 14:46:36 CDT
From:    ***@PROCTR.CBA.UA.EDU
Subject: Kathy Johnson/Julianne McNamara

Does anyone know what tumbling passes Kathy and Julianne used on
floor during the '84 Games?

Shawn

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Date:    Wed, 10 Jul 1996 15:58:50 -0400
From:    ***@GROVE.IUP.EDU
Subject: HOME FIELD ADVANTAGE

How soon until the us teams begin practice in the Georgia Dome? They  could
 really get used to the equipment by the time the comp. rolls around.

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Date:    Wed, 10 Jul 1996 16:37:58 -0400
From:    ***@UMICH.EDU
Subject: Re: Unified Team

larissa does have a scholarship to stanford last i heard...and i think
amy does too...i doubt that commercial would have jepordized it, or why
do it when you have accepted the scholarship already?


> I honestly didn't think that Boginskaya would have made such a team, but
> her performance at European's tells otherwise.  My seven would be
> Khorkina, Kotchetkova, Galieva, Piskun, Podkopayeva, Boginskaya, and
> Chusovitina.  There are so many to choose from, though, including
> Mirgordskaya, Fabrichnova, Grosheva, Dolgopolova, Knizhnik, the
> Yurkinas, Sheremeta (who would challenge Chuxovitina for that 7th spot),
> etc. etc. etc. It just blows my mind to think of the possibilities!  I
> think I'm really glad that the republics are competing seperately
> now--imagine the gymnasts we'd never get to see in competition--and I
> wonder how many great gymnasts we never did see in the past.
>
> And last I heard, Amy Chow was going to Stanford on a gymnastics
> scholarship, along with Larissa Fontaine.  Does that Coke ad make Chow
> ineligible, and can anyone verify that Larissa is going to compete in
> gymnastics?
>
> :) Joy
>

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Date:    Wed, 10 Jul 1996 16:56:41 -0400
From:    ***@FOX.NSTN.CA
Subject: Re: Kathy Johnson/Julianne McNamara

Shawn asked:

"Does anyone know what tumbling passes Kathy and Julianne used on
floor during the '84 Games?"

Kathy Johnson mounted with a triple twist, middle pass was a double pike
and ended with a double twist.

Julianne mounted with a tucked full-in, middle pass was a tucked double
back and she also dismounted with a double twist.

In the all-around competition, Kathy over rotated her triple twist and
landed on the judges table - knocking over a can of Coke!

                        Leslie

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Date:    Wed, 10 Jul 1996 18:24:56 -0400
From:    ***@HICOM.NET
Subject: Re: Olympic Gymnasts and College

Very interesting topic, that of female Olympic gymnasts and college...it was
certainly not an issue for the majority of the '92 Womens' team, with the
exception of Wendy Bruce...do we know if she ever made it to college?  I
sincerely hope so, since, as she said in a 'fluff' piece during those Games, she
had pretty much devoted her life to representing her country in gymn,
sacrificing a whole bunch (not the least of which was parents' financial
security...) and her view was that the very least she deserves is a college
education...

I heard on the '96 Olympic Trials broadcast that Chow was headed for Stanford,
but I am not sure if she will compete in gymn on scholarship or not.  So, that's
one more to add to your compilation of gymnasts and their colleges.

And thanks, I didn't know that Miller was interested in Stanford.  As a
student-gymnast or as a ["mere";)] student?

Michele

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Date:    Wed, 10 Jul 1996 15:49:30 +0100
From:    ***@ASUCLA.UCLA.EDU
Subject: Re: Kathy Johnson/Julianne McNamara

Does anyone know what tumbling passes Kathy and Julianne used on
floor during the '84 Games?


Julianne-
          tucked full-in
          double tuck
          double full

Kathy

          triple twist
          double pike
          double full

In AA Kathy totally fell out of her first pass ,flying across the floor and
fell onto the judges who had the most horrified expressions on their faces
as they struggled to push her back  onto the floor.

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Date:    Wed, 10 Jul 1996 19:11:00 EDT
From:    ***@PSUVM.PSU.EDU
Subject: Wendy

Last I heard from Wendy, she was attending a college in Florida while
working at Brown's.  I don't think she's eligible for a gymnastics
scholarship because she represented Alpha Factor back in '90-'92, I
think.  (Remember the back covers of International Gymnast?)

And Shannon can't be a student-gymnast, at least not competing
collegiately, becase she's represented companies and accepted money.

And Jaycie is keeping her eligibility intact.  I've noticed that none of
Mary Lee's gymnasts give up their eligibility, which is probably the
wisest choice.  Look at how Karin Lichey has done in her first year of
college.

:) Joy

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Date:    Wed, 10 Jul 1996 17:05:18 -0700
From:    ***@SEATTLEU.EDU
Subject: Help!

Could somebody PLEASE forward the digests from Tuesday July 9th because
my server was down and I didn't receive the digest(s) that day.  Thanks a
million!!
Corrie:)

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Date:    Wed, 10 Jul 1996 17:48:10 -0700
From:    ***@SHILAH.ENG.SUN.COM
Subject: Dear Gymn Guru...

Olympic Gold Edition Special Olympic Gold Edition Special Olympic Gold Edition

 ------------------------------------------------------------------------
 NOTE: This is intended to be satirical and a take-off of the popular
 "Emily PostNews" UseNet article.  Please realize that it often highlights
 what *NOT* to do on Gymn, and is intended to be educational, yet fun.

                           "Dear Gymn Guru"
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------

As the 1996 Olympics nears, the whole world is in GYMNASTICS HEAVEN, as
there is much scheduled gymnastics activity circulating within the ether.
In a few short weeks the jewel of gymnastics competition, some would argue
of the Olympics itself, will play itself out like a drama for the ages. And
where is the anticipation, the excitement, more severe than Gymn?  Where
is the appreciation of gymnastics stronger than the Gymn forum?  Where is
the concentration of gymnastics content and admiration greater than Gymn's
own Gymnastics Forum?

This special addition "Dear Gymn Guru" addresses the issue of avoiding
posting pitfalls that might spoil a person's enjoyment of the Olympics,
get the list off topic or diluted with non gymnastics-related trivia.

Q: Yo, Gymn Guru!  I just got back to the hotel from Olympics finals!  Guess
who won????????????????????  You won't believe it!!!!!!!!!!!!

A: Whoa, there Jezabel!  Because of tape delay, most people haven't even
seen compulsories yet and there you go giving us a sneak preview of finals!
In this instant, you'd best use more exclamation points!  And put everything
in CAPS!  Better yet, put names of the winners in the Subject line, so that
people that think they might not want to know see it anyway!  Something like:

Subject:  !!!!!! YURI DOMOY WINS RINGS !!!!!! YAAAAAYYYYY !!!!!!!!!

Q: Hey, Gymn Guru.  Did you see that stupid Coca-Cola commercial?  It was
so stupid!  Ha ha ha!  I think they made it stupid on purpose!!  Wait a
minute.  I captured it using my special PC graphics software and video
board.  Let me attach an mpeg file of it.  It's REALLY STUPID...

A: Now wait just a second, Gus!  This certainly is a completely valid topic,
since Coca-Cola bottling company is headquartered in Atlanta and the
Olympics are also in Atlanta.  And CC is also a sponsor!  But who are you
to call a Coca-Cola commercial stupid?  I bet lots of gymnasts drink Coke.
Do you think they're stupid, too?

Q: Speaking of Coke, did you hear that they call it that because it used
to have cocaine in it, Gymn Guru?  Wow!  What's up with that?

A: Yeah, I heard that, too!  Let's start a topic on that one!  Anybody
got the 411 on that?

Q: Excuse me, everybody.  "BUTCH!  YOU JUST PAGED ME BUT I FORGOT TO WRITE
THE NUMBER DOWN!  COULD YOU PAGE ME AGAIN WHEN YOU GET THIS?"  Sorry to
bother everyone.

A: No problem.  I often use the forum as a vehicle for reaching a friend
or two.  That's what it's for!

Subject:  Re: Something obscure
To: Multiple recipients of list GYMN-L <GYMN-L@PSUVM.PSU.EDU>

count me in!

A: Hey, you didn't ask a question!  How's Gymn Guru going to show off
Gymn Guru's broad knowledge if you don't ask Gymn Guru questions?

Subject:  Hey, Gymn Guru, have you seen this thing unrelated to gymnastics?

        Top Ten reasons Boris Yeltsin may be Elvis:

A: No!  You didn't post the list!  Post the complete list!  Attach all
the headers!  Thanks for putting it in question format.

Q: How come they don't ever have any PowerBar commercials during these
gymnastics things?  I think PowerBars rule!  I could eat them all the
time!  In fact, I do!  I see a lot of gymnasts eat Powerbars at meets
sometimes.  They're pretty cool when they do this.  I know Shannon
Miller eats them.  At least somebody told me she does.  I LOVE SHANNON
MILLER!  AND I LOVE POWRBARS!!!!  SHANNON AND POWERBARS RULE!!!!!

A: Cool. Every tried Pbars with Coke?

Yours in Gymnastics,

-Gymn Guru

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Date:    Wed, 10 Jul 1996 21:07:51 EDT
From:    ***@BBN.COM
Subject: Possible TV alert

This past Monday, the Bravo cable channel showed the movie "Tokyo Olympiad,"
a Japanese documentary about the 1964 Olympic games.  It includes about
7 minutes of footage of gymnastics (women and men).  It's mostly just
snippets of the top competitors, but the snake's eye view of men's
high bar is interesting.

Bravo tends to repeat movies, so check your listings.  BTW, despite
what your local TV Guide might say, the movie runs just under 3 hours.
TV Guide is apparently using the running time for the heavily edited
version that mostly played the US in the '60s, while Bravo is actually
showing the original version (and letterboxed, to boot).

The gymnastics segment starts about 75 minutes or 80 minutes into the movie.

>>Kathy

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Date:    Wed, 10 Jul 1996 21:28:33 -0400
From:    ***@AOL.COM
Subject: Re: Piskun and hypothetical Unified Team

Beth asks:
>     So who would gymners put on a hypotheticial Unified Team?

Khorkina, Podkopayeva, Piskun, Karpenko, Kotchetkova, Chusovitina, Galieva

:-)
Mara

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Date:    Wed, 10 Jul 1996 22:14:46 -0400
From:    ***@OPAL.TUFTS.EDU
Subject: what happened?

Does anyone know how  or why I was unsubscribed from the list? I just
stopped receiving mail one day and I when I sent a message to the
listserv, it said wasn't subscribed to the list. Did this happen to
anyone else?

Melissa

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Date:    Wed, 10 Jul 1996 21:39:03 +0000
From:    ***@RMII.COM
Subject: Re: what happened?

> Does anyone know how  or why I was unsubscribed from the list? I just

If your mail is repeatedly bouncing, then the listserv will AUTOMATICALLY
unsubscribe you, without human intervention.  This happens quite
frequently these days.

To everyone, please note that the administrative address for Gymn is:

GYMN-L-REQUEST@PSUVM.PSU.EDU

Please use that address for any future subscription questions. Generally
speaking, you can expect a much quicker response if you send your note to
that address, because your message will stand out, rather than be buried
among the day's 40 gymn messages.

Thanks,
Rachele

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Date:    Thu, 11 Jul 1996 00:34:07 -0400
From:    ***@AOL.COM
Subject: I'm sorry, but this statement really ticked me off!

In a message dated 96-07-10 09:27:00 EDT, you write:

>  What makes
>a female gymnast stand out in my mind when I first see her is usually
>originality.  It's hard to be innovative on most of the mens' events.

In my opinion, the men are THE innovators in gymnastics. Just look at bars.
It was common practice for men to do release moves fully TEN YEARS before the
women started doing them. Multiple releases and direct multiple releases are
about as far behind.

Does anyone remember a post a few months back to the list, where it showed
firsts for men and women? First double full, first tsuk and so on. Anybody
notice what proportion of those tricks were performed by men first and how
long before?

Now before anyone starts jumping down my throat, calling me a sexist, and
citing the few exceptions to the statements above, let me say this. I'm am
not saying that men are better gymnasts than women. Just that it is fairly
obvious that the men do the lions' share of the innovation in the sport.

Dean

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End of GYMN-L Digest - 10 Jul 1996 to 11 Jul 1996 - Special issue
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