Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, May 6, 1 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY I . I I - WHILE YOU WERE AWAY 1 Iyou think youdre getting a great shave. with a razorblade, Wolverine teams busy over A razor blade can give you a good, close shave on the easy, parts of your face. Like your cheeks. Because your cheeks are almost f lat, like a razor blade. But what about the hard- to-shave parts of your face? Feel your neck. Feel how your beard grows down on part of your neck? And up on another part? (Some beards even grow sideways.) To give you a close, comfortable shave on your neck, we designed the Norelco Tripleheader with 18 self sharpening rotary blades tnat shave in every direction. eeel your face. Feel your chin The Norelco Tripleheader has 3 MicrogrooveM shaving heads that float to follow the curves of your chin. The heads go inwhere your chin goes in, and out where your chin goes out. To give you a really close shave, without irritating your skin. (In independent tests, the Tripleheader shaved as close or closer than a stainless steel blade in 2 out of 3 shaves.) Feel your upper lip The hard thing about shaving your upper lip with a razor blade is shaving close enough. Again, the unique Norelco design lets you maneuver around your nose and mouth, to shave your beard in every direction. Feel your sideburns The biggest problem with shaving sideburns is to get them straight, and even on both sides. The Norelco Tripleheader has a pop-up trimmer that lets you see exactly what you're trimming. So it's a lot harder to make a mistake. Now, run your hand over your whole face. If your beard feels uneven, maybe you should be shaving with a Norelco Tripleheader. It comes in two models. The Cord Model Tripleheader (with easy flip-top cleaning). And the new Rechargeable Tripleheader (the shaver that gives you up to twice as many shaves per charge as any other rechargeable). Either one will give your face a whole new feel. While the mass of Ann Arbor humanity sweated out finals prior to getting the heck out of town, the work of many of the athletes involved in spring sports was still unfinished af- ter the last exam. .Baseball The Wolverine diamondmen hustled, all over during the ex- am break, as they played eight games, sevenhagainst Big Ten foes. But when the dust had settled, Coach Moby Benedict's crew had but two wins to show for their efforts. Summer Language .institute CHINESE FRENCH GERMAN HEBREW ITALIAN RUSSIAN SPANISH June 29 -August 28, 1970 University of California Santa Cruz Living - learning language programs for beginning and intermediate students. Intensive nine week sessions at Merrill College, UCSC. 15 units University credit. Application deadline: May 10 Cost: $661 including room and board for further information write: Ben T. Clark, Summer Language Institute UC Santa Crue, Ca. 95060 The team opened conference warfare with a doubleheader at Iowa City against the Hawk- eyes. The Wolverines r o d e a two- run homer by Tom Lund- stedt and a three-run shot by Mike Bowen to a 7-2 victory in the opener, but the bats fizzled out in the second game as the Hawks held Michigan to b u t four hits to notch a 4-1 tri- umph. The Wolverines' misfortunes continued the next day as they dropped a doubleheader to Min- nesota in Minneapolis. The Go- phers broke a 1-1 tie with four sixth inning runs to take a 5-1 decision in the opener as the Michigan bats remained in the mothballs. In the second game, the first five Gopher batters to step to the plate scored, and al- though the Wolverines kept pecking away, their comeback fell short as Minnesota held on for a 5-4 decision. The horsehidemen travelled to South Bend last Wednesday for a return engagement against the Fighting Irish. The Wol- verines had won a thrilling 3-2 decision earlier in the season here in Ann Arbor. but they didn't taste victory in S o u t h Bend as the Irish used a seven run seventh inning to key a 10- 4 triumph. This past weekend s a w the Wolverines play three games against arch rival Michigan State. with only the first two counting in conference stand- ings. The series opened with a single contest at East Lansing Friday and the Spartans took advantage of Michigan hurler Jim Burton's early wildness to post a 6-3 decision. The teams travelled to Ann Arbor for a doubleheader Sat- urday afternoon and the Wol- verines evened the series with a hard-fought 3-2 victory in the opener. Michigan was nurs- ing a one run lead going into the seventh inning when start- ing pitcher Pete Helt felt his arm growing tight in the cold weather. Coach Benedict sur-! prised nearly everyone by bring- ing in Burton to relieve. Burton had pitched nine strong innings the day before and as a south- paw he would be facing a Spar- tan line-up stacked with sev- en right-handed swingers. Coach Benedict explained the strategy. "Jim's strong and can pitch two days inrarow, and * - ----------------0 4 Awards given With the completion of spring football drills, the coaching staff announced the recipients of three annual awards. Switched from quarterback to safety this spring, senior-to-be Jim Betts, by showing the greatest development and most promise, won himself the prestigious Meyer Morton Award. Freshman Tom Coyle received the John F. Maulbetsch Award given to the freshman player on the basis of desire, character, and leadership. Sophomore Pete Elliott was given the Frederick C. Mat- thaei Award which goes to the junior-to-be who has displayed leadership, drive, and achieve- ment. we really needed the win. You go with the guy that gets them out." 'Burton responded to the chal- lenge in fine style, putting down the first six men he faced, five on strikeouts. He racked up an- other strikeout in the ninth to help him work out of a jam. However, the Wolverines drop- ped the nightcap 8-1 as t h e y could manage only four hits. Track The main event in the track scene was Ira Russell. The Michigan senior took the long jump title in both the Ohio State Relays and the Penn State Relays w i t h jumps of 24-91/ and 23-1112, then was a double winner in the Ohio State dual meet, again taking t h e long jump and also the triple jump. However, he's not talking about his w i ns, but why he hasn't yet jumped 25 feet. He came close in Philadelphia where he was shy by 2% inches. "Everything has to be perfect to get into the 25-foot range," Coach Dave Martin said. "But I think Ira will make it before the season's over." Michigan took the dual meet from Ohio State 84-70, with Russell's jumps of 23-21/2 in the long jump and 48-3 in the trip- le jump aiding the cindermen. His distance in the triple jump was only 5% inches o f f the Michigan varsity record. "I didn't think we would do so well in the shot put or the 440 hur- dles," Martin said. break The Wolverines swept b o t h events. In the shot put Giulio Catallo paved the way with a 52-Y2 toss and Reggie Bradford led the 440-hurdles sweep with a :48.6. Other firsts included the 440-yard relay (:41.1), the mile relay (3:18.4), Norm Corn- well in the 660 (1:18), Godfrey Murray in the high hurdles (:13.8), John Mann in the high jump (6-10), and Ron Shortt in the 'ole vault (14-6). In tie Drake Relays, the Wolverines' only representative, Godfrey Murray, finished third in the 120-high hurdles over Eastern Michigan's Bill Tipton. Tentnis The tennis squad added three more victories between semes- ters to bring their conference streak to 26 straight, and 45 out of 46. They set down Toledo 8-1 back in April, then beat Minne- sota 5-4, and Iowa 9-0. They are now 10-2 for the season, and 6-0 in the Big Ten. The win over the Gophers was a squeaker, decided in the final doubles match. Dick Ravreby, playing for the first time since a leg injury in California, and Dick Ott teamed up to decision Dick Darner and Fred Lappin of the Gophers. The Wolverines won in straight sets 6-4 and 8-6. The netters lost only one set in defeating the Hawkeyes. That raised their d u ak meet point total to 44 out of a possi- ble 54. Golf Michigan's golf captain Ran- dy Erskine paced the Wolverine squad at the Northern Intercol- legiate Golf Tournament held last weekend in Champaign, Ila Erskine's"four-round total of 313 was six strokes off the indi- vidual lead and tied him f o r fourth place. The Wolverine golf team, as a whole, didn't fare as well, carding a 1618 for a ninth-place tie. Other Michigan scores were Keith Mohan 323, Gary Balliet 323, John Roska, 333, Pete Clarke 335 and Dan Hunter 341. d fLb D1 w- THE MICHIGAN DAILY NEEDS you can't get any closer New York, N.Y. 10017, EXPERIENCED AND ENTHUSIASTIC PHOTOGRAPH1ERS MUST BE BRAVE AND FLEET-FOOTED BRING ANY SAMPLES OF WORK AVAILABLE MEETING: 7:00 P.M. THURS. IN DAILY BUILDING 2nd floor If unable to attend: Leave name on Photo Board in Daily Y EXCITEMENT ADVENTURE TRAVEL BLOOD GUTS ACTION THE DAILY IS AN EQUAL OPP'TY EMPLOYER (WE BELIEVE IN WOMEN'S LIB.) i I 11 Kate /'.' two buildings in. search of absolutes These two buildings rose From the same dream. From the same architect, in fact. Expressing in glass and concrete the words of Carl Sandburg... "The skyscrapers stand proud. They seem to say they have sought the absolute and made it their own. Yet they are blameless, innocent as dumb steel and the dumber concrete of their bastions. 'Van made us,' they murmur. 'We are proud only as man is proud and we have no more found the absolute than has man." If the ideals these buildings stand for. In political affairs and in commerce - Are to survive, Your generation must search for and find Absolutes. You are their life insurance. Mc- Garragal and Roma Baron Baird House Blues and Ragtime Piano and Guitar Next Week Ray Bieri all, A I I 1-~b A J A a Al I I