FRMAY, FEBRUARY 16, 19618 THE MICHIGAN DAILY VAnV T,%TTr. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1968 THE MICHTGdIN fl&ITY A £~E' £ C3vA5. kvA.tL ci *U.S. Medal Chances Near Calm Oblivion By The Associated Press ( test in world record time of seven GRENOBLE, France-America's minutes, 22.4 seconds. luckless skiers hovered on the Can brink of an Olympic medal shut- Manfred Schmid of Austria and out yesterday after four U.S. girls Erika Lechner of Italy were de- finished far off the winning pace lared the winners of the men's' blazed by Canada's Nancy Greene1 in the giant slalom-last women's event of the 1968 Winter Game. U.S. Olympic forces also drew blanks in four other championship fianls-the men's 5,000-meter speed skating, men's and women's luge singles and men's biathlon relay race-with a 6-4 consolation hockey victory over winless East Germany the day's only bright spot. With three days of competition remaining on the skating rinks and ski slopes in and around this bustling winter resort town, the U.S. still needs one more medal to surpass the total of six ac- cumulated in the 1964 Games at Innsbruck, Austria. and women's luge singles on the basis of their first three runs after unfavorable weather caused can- celation of the fourth and final heats in the small sled races. Russia took in third gold medal with a decisive triumph over Nor- way and Sweden in the 4x7.5-kilo- meter biathlon relay, which com- bines cross-country ski racing with rifle marksmanship. Americans didn't expect to win medals in the luge or biathlon events-and none came close to upsetting the form charts. The U.S. hockey team blew a two-goal lead in the third period onds. The victory gave the Amer- icans, eliminated from medal con- tention in the round-robin tour- nament, a 2-4 record with one game remaining against Finland tomorrow. Be Miss Green zipped to a decisive 2.64 seconds victory over France's Annie Famose in the ladies" giant slalom for her second, and Can- ada's second medal in the Games. "I was determined to win if I had to break my neck doing it," said the 24-year-old college coed, who had placed second to Marielle FRED ANTON MAIER Goitschel of France in the special before Larry Stordahl of Edina, slalom two days ago. Minn., and Paul Hurley of St. Paul, Nancy tore down the 1,610- Minn., each fired his second' goal meter, 68-gate giant slalom course of the game in the final 61 sec- in one minute, 51.97 seconds, with Miss Famose second in 1:54.61 and Fernande Bochatay of Swit- zerland third in 1:54.74. The triumph, coupled with her silver medal finish in the slalom 1 " and 10th place wind-up in the intAXTOIAll-t Mfl downhill, enabled the Canadian Allen of San Pedro, Calif., 22nd star to edge Misses Goitschel and in 2:00.3. Famose for the Olympic women's "I took two gates backward to- combined title. day," said Judy "They came upon The American girls, whose sur- me so fast I couldn't help it." prisingly strong runs in the spe- "It was a long, hard race," add- cial slalom Tuesday were erased ed Miss Chaffee, "and all the girls by disqualifications and spills, were huffing and puffing." again finished out of the running. For Miss Greene, the 1967 World Judy Nagel, the 16-year-old Cup Champion, it was almost a schoolgirl from Ecumclaw, Wash., breeze. "I was really confident I who led in the slalom before tumb- would win," she said. "I think per- ling on her second run, was 12th haps it was my greatest race ever. with a time of 1:57.39. Suzie Chaf- I don't know whether I made a fee of Rurtland, Vt., came in 17th mistake or not. I only know I at- in 1:58.38; Kiki Cutter of Bend, tacked the course with everything Ore., 21st in 1:59.52 and Wendy I had." WHAT MAKES CHRISTIANITY DIFFERENT -CHRIST RISEN FROM THE DEAD DR. MERRILL C. TEN NEY, Ph.D. from Harvard U. -in Greek cnd Patristic Studies presents: "THE CREDIBILITY OF THE RESSURECTION" FRIDAY, Feb. 16 at 7:30 P.M. UGL.I Multipurpose Room Sponsored by' Michigan Christian Fellowship Over 20 Years Audio Experience, "WHAT WE SELL-WE SERVICE" ANN ARBOR'S FINE COLLECTION OF NEW & USED EQUIPMENT Phone 668-7942 KLH-DYNACO-AR-DUAL J ENSEN-KENWOOD-STANTON--GARRARD FISHER-SHERWOOD-LANSING SONY-CONCERTONE--AMPEX-NORELCO SCOTT---MARANTZ-GRUNDIG & MORE OPEN TILL 9 MONDAY & FRIDAY --Associated Press CANADA'S NANCY GREENE races down the giant slalom course on her way to a gold medal and a world championship in the Winter Olympics yesterday at Chamrousse, France. Miss Greene's time of 1:51.97 was good for Canada's first gold medal. SCORING RACE: Cagers Make Top Ten Skiing LL IW And the high hopes of Alpine ski pilot Bob Beattie, before a bizarre string of injuries and misfortunesR struck down his men's and r mR a women's teams. have dwindled to a single faint glimmer for a By The Associated Press medal-winner finish in tomor- row's men's special slalom. GRENOBLE,' France - South1 Jean - Claude Killy, France's Africa was readmitted last night highballing ski marvel, goes for into the summer Olympics in his third gold medal in the climac-' Mexico and the action imme- tic Alpine test, with Americans diately raised the possibility that Billy Kidd, Jimmy Heuga, Spider several other African nations, and Sabich and Rich Chafee given no even the Soviet Union, might boy- better than outside chances of cott the Mexican Games. cracking the top three. Russian sports officials at the Skaters have accounted for each Winter Games here had indicated of the half dozen medals captured this week that if South Africa by Americans thus far, with won- competes in the summer Games drous Peggy Fleming taking the the Soviet Union won't. lone gold award in women's figure But Soviet officials had no im- skating. mediate reaction last night to the Yesterday, however, an Amer- announcement by the Internation- ican trio failed to make the top al Olympic Committee ending the 20 as Norway's Fred Anton.Maier! South African suspension. won the men's 5,000-meter speed / The secretary of the IOC, Col. 1 Imittance John Westerhoff said that a favorable postal vote had been made by the IOC on a resolution readmitting South Africa to Olympic competition. He did not disclose the exact vote but said it was an absolute majority. The IOC secretary said the ma-f jority vote had been received on1 the basis of several assurances by the South African government. MEDAL STANDINGS Gold Silver Bronze Norway 4 4 1 France 3 3 1 Russia 3 4 2 Italy 3 0 0 Holland 2 2 3 West Germany 2 2 2 Austria 1 1 3 Sweden 2 1 2 United States 1 4 1 Finland 1 2 2 Canada I 1 0 Czechoslovakia 1 0 1 Switzerland 0 2 2 East Germany 0 2 2 Rumania 0 0 1 By The Associated Press Wolverine basketball regulars Dennis Stewart, Jim Pitts, and Rudy Tomianovich placed eighth, ninth and tenth respectively in the latest conference scoring sta- tistics released yesterday. Stewart owns a 19.5'scoring av- erage, followed by team captain Pitts with 18.8 and sophomore Tomianovich with 17.6. Minnesota's Tom Kondla, the Big Ten's defending scoring champion, is finally throwing his weight around in the point-mak- ing race but much too late. The Gopher senior, after an ex- tremely slow start, leaped this a week from 10th to sixth place in a recent spree which upped his average to 20.9 for nine league games. Three weeks'ago, Kondla was far out of the top ten. However, the 6-8 Gopher would have to shoot at about a 45-point pace in his final five games to * overhaul the current pacesetter; Purdue's brilliant sophomore, Rick Mount. Official conference statistics re- leased yesterday credited the 6-4, 177-pound Mount with a 7-game Average of 29.7, giving him a three-point bulge over Iowa's Sam Williams, runnerup with 26.7. Still holding third place was Wisconsin's Joe Franklin pith 25.3. Moving from sixth to fourth spot was Dave Scholz of Illinois with 22.3. Ohio State's Bill Hos- ket 'dropped a notch to fifth with 22.1. Seventh was Dale Kelley of Northwestern with 20.0 Last season's scoring crown went to Kondla with a 14-game average of 28.3. Ohio State 6-2 which risks its league lead tomorrow night at last-place Minnesota 2-7 remains the hottest conference shooting club with an 88.8-point average. ~T.- ~ Your place in the world could be overseas Big Ten Standings l Ohio State Iowa Northwestern Wisconsin Illinoist Purdue Michigan. State Indiana MICHIGAN Minnesota W L 6 2 5 2 5 3 5 3 4 3 4 3 3 4 25 2 6 2 7 Pct. .750. .714 .625 .625 .571 .571 .429 .286 .250 .222 CCHAMBER MUSIC LOVERS: This \Aeekend's festival won't last forever. Visit us and browse through our comprehensive coverage of CHAMBER MUSIC Reccrds last and last and last . 7w Careers and Opportunities in International service Herbert and Mary Stewart Krosney This timely, practical book tells you in detail how to pre- pare and apply for the many unusual and fascinating jobs available-in the United Nations, Foreign Servioe, U.S.I.A.. International Busi- ness, Overseas Airlines, The Peace Corps Foreign Mis- sions, and many other fields. Photographs. D-208 $1.45 E. P. DUTTON & CO. 201 Park Ave. SOlth, N.Y.,N.Y.1000Y3 MUSIC SHf 417 E. Liberty Just Past the AA Bank Saturday's Games MICHIGAN at Indiana Michigan State at Northwestern Ohio State at Minnesota Wisconsin at Iowa Purdue at Illinois .: ,, w, _.. t 0 0 I f Going w " 0 "0 " s Performace. drop-i i.. . . . . " . . 'N/ I _U (By the author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boysl", "Dobie Gillis," etc.) MORNINGS AT SEVEN...AND THERE'S NOTHING YOU CAN DO ABOUT IT Any man who says morning is the best time of day is either a liar or a meadow lark. There is only one way to make morning enjoyable: sleep till noon. Failing that, the very best you can do is to make morning tolerable. This, I am pleased to report, is possible if you will follow three simple rules: 1. Shave properly. By shaving properly I mean shaving quietly. Don't use a blade that whines and complains. Morning being a time of clanger and anger, use a blade that neither clangs nor angs. Use a blade that makes no din on your chin, no squeak on your cheek, no howl on your jowl, no rip on your lip, no waves while it shaves. Use, in short, Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades. I have been shaving for 71 years (not too impressive until one considers that I am 49 years old) and I am here to tell you that the quietest blade I know is Personna. I not only shave with Personna, but I also admire it. Old vir- tues reappear in Personna; old values are reborn. Per- sonna is a modest blade, an undemanding blade. Persona does not rasp and tug, yelling, "Hey, lookit me !" No, sir, not Personna! Silently, respectfully, unobtrusively, Per- sonna whisks your whiskers with nary a whisper. It shucks your soil and stubble without toil and trouble. Why, you hardly know it's there, this well-bred Personna blade, this paragon of punctilio. Moreover, this crown of the blade-maker's art, this epitome of epidermal efficacy, is available both in Double- edge style and Injector style. Do your kisser a favor: get some. 2. Breakfast properly. I assert that a Personna shave is the best of all possible shaves, But I do not assert that a Personna shave, brac- ing though it may be, is enough to prepare you for the hideous forenoon ahead. After shaving you must eat an ample breakfast. Take, for example, the case of Basil Metabolism, a soph- omore at VM.I. Basil, knowing there was to be an inspec- tion by the Commandant one morning, prepared by stor- ing up energy. He recognized that coffee and juice would not sustain him, so he had a flitch of bacon, a clutch of eggs, a batch of bagels, a notch of ham, a bunch of butter, a swatch of grits, a hutch of honey, a patch of jelly, a thatch of jam, a twitch of pepper, and a pinch of salt. The idea was right; the quantities, alas, were not.When the Commandant arrived, Basil, alas, was so torpid that he could not raise his bloated arm in a proper salute. He was, of course, immediately shot by a firing squad. Today, a perforated man, he earns a meagre living as a collander in Cleveland. 3. Read properly. Always read the paper at breakfast. It inhibits bolting. But do not read the front page. That is full of bad, acid- making news. Read a more pleasant part of the paper- the Home and Garden section, for example. For instance, in my local paper, The Westport Peasant, there is a delightful column called "Ask Harry Home- spun" which fairly bristles with bucolic wisdom and many an earthy chuckle. I quote some questions and answers : Q:s 1am thinking of buying some power tools. What should I get first? A: Hospitalization. Q: How do you get rid of moes? A: Pave the lawn. Q: What is the best way to put a wide car in a narrow There's plenty of room at the top. But it starts with the first step, the right step. Have. you considered all alternatives for your first one yet? Perhaps you're not really sure where to start. Montgomery Ward has been in the people business for over 95 years. 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