Y. JUNE G# 1959 THE MICHIGAN D AILI rAGE M Y. JUNE 2G. 1959 THE MICHIGAN DAILI PAGE ~ Olmedo Advances U.S. Netter Overcomes Indian Star; Teammate MacKay Conquers Dane in Tourney CELASINED EA WIMBLEDON, England (A) - Alex Olmedo, the hawk - faced favorite from Peru, today defeated highly rated Ramanathan Krish- nan of India in the match of the week and moved into the last 16 of the men's singles of the Wim- bledon Tennis Championships. Top-seeded Olmedo knocked out 22-year-old Krishnan 6-4, 3-6, 6-4, 7-5 in a match that had the center" court crowd of 15,000 tense and excited for 90 minutes. Krishnan had beaten Olmedo last week in the semifinals of the Queen's Club Tournament but to- day his position play and his soft but accurate cross court taps couldn't matchrthe Peruvian's power. "Olmedo's stretch across the net is fantastic," Krishnan said after the match. "He seems to cover the whole length and he moved about the court like a cat." Mackay Wins Barry Mackay, Olmedo's 23- year - old American Davis Cup teammate from Dayton, Ohio, also advanced to the round of 16. Mac- kay, seeded. fifth, gained a , 6-3, Few Ducks For Hunters WASHINGTON (-) - The In- terior Department had bad news{ yesterday for duck hunters. It reported that millions of waterfowl, forced out of their cus- tomary nesting grounds by pro- longed drought, were attempting to find new nesting areas in Ca- nada but having trouble with an 6-2, 6-4 victory over John Leschly, an 18-year-old Dane. Earl Buchholz, the 18-year-old high school sensation from St. Louis, did not play today. Buch- holz, another Davis Cup player, is due to meet 45-year-old Gardnar Mulloy of Miami in the third round tomorrow. Olmedo and seven Americans were involved in singles matches today as the schedule was juggled to clean up rained-out matches from yesterday and to start the doubles competition. Mackay and four American women won their matches. Two men were beaten. Women Successful Darlene Hard, the fourth-seeded player from Montebello, Calif., and Sally Moore, the Bakersfield, Calif., 18-year-old who is seeded seventh, reached the last 16 of women's singles with third round victories. Miss Hard defeated Mrs. Rose- mary Deloford of Britain 6-0, 6-2. Miss Moore defeated Paula Cour- teix of France 6-4, 6-4. In the second round. Mimi Ar- nold of Redwood City, Calif., rallied from a slow start and beat youthful Deidre Catt of Britain 2-6, 6-3, 6-4. Karol Fageros, the statuesques Miami model, trounced Mrs. A. H. Thomas of Britain 6-2, 6-1. It was Italy's blonde Lea Peri- coli whose costume attracted at- tention today. She displayed eye- catching flimsy white panties on the court as she met fifth-seeded' Sandra Reynolds of South Africa. But the 19-year-old Miss Reynolds had the stronger game and won 3-6, 7-5, 6-3. Christine Truman of England, top-seeded, was the fourth seeded women player to reach the round' of 16 and all eight still are in con- tention. She had to beat down to beat Pat Ward of Britam 4-6, 6-4, 6-3. eighth - seeded countryman Roy Emerson beat Andres Gimeno of Spain 6-2, 3-6, 6-4, 6-1. Jean Claude Molineri, French Davis Cupper, defeated Malcolm Fox of Baltimore 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, 6-2 and Manuel Santana of Spain de- feated Jack Grigry of Alhambra, Calif., 6-2, 4-6, 4-6, 9-7, 6-1 in second round matches. Olmedo Confident "Beating Krishnan gave me more confidence," Olmedo said after his center court tussle with the big Indian. "He was one of the top players in the tournament even if he was unseeded. I'm going into the next round with all the confidence in the world." More NCAA Net Upsets EVANSTON, Ill. (P) - Notre Dame's Max Brown pulledthe second major upset of the NCAA Tennis Tournament yesterday by eliminating third-seeded Ron Holmberg of Tulane in the singles quarterfinals 6-4, 6-2. He was joined in the upper bracket semifinals by top-seeded Whitney Reed of San Jose State, who rallied to defeat Art Andrews of Iowa 2-6, 6-1, 6-1. Andrews yesterday produced the tournament's first upset when he eliminated seventh-seeded Jon Erickson of Michigan in the fourth round. The lower bracket quarterfinals will be played tomorrow. Donald Dell, Yale, seeded No. 2, will meet Crawford Henry of Tulane, seeded No. 5. Fourth-seeded Jerry Moss, Miami, wil face sixth-seed- ed Ned Neely of Georgia Tech. Holmberg's only lead was a 4-3 margin in the first set. Brown came back to win the next three games, breaking the Tulane star's service twice. Holmberg, hampered by a blis- ter on the middle finger of his racket hand, was unable to take full advantage of his usual rush- ing game which had carried him to victory in the first three rounds. WINNING FORM AT WIMBLEDON-Mrs. Beverly Baker Fleitz, ambidextrous player from Long Beach, Calif., makes left handed return in match against South African Renee Schuurman in all- England tennis championships at Wimbledon yesterday. Mrs. Fleitz advanced with a 4-6, 6-4, 6-2 victory. AT PITTSBURGH: Suggs, Hagge Tie for First In Women' Golf Tourne FOR RENT 3 BEDROOM HOUSE Modern ranch type house on large corner lot. Newly redecorated, ap- plces furnished, attached garage pancestio Large living room with fire place. Roomy kitchen with dinette area. School nearby. One year lease or more. NO 3-8677, 12-1 or 5-7 P.M. 018 APARTMENTS FOR RENT. "Furnished or unfurnished," on and off campus location, two bedroom, abundant closet space, tiled bathroom and shower, large living room, air-con- ditioned If desired, birch kitchen, closets and counters, Westinghouse electric range and refrigerator, wash- ers and driers. Tel. NO 2-7787. On evenings and Sundays after 6, NO 5-6714 or NO 5-5515. 017 2 BDRM. apt. on 1st floor. Stove, refrig. Campus. $110 includes everything. NO 3-4747. 016 ROOMS FOR MEN: Quiet. Campus area. Linens furnished. Low rent. NO 3-4747. C5 SINGLE ROOM, private bath, linens, near campus and hospital. NO 5-5605. 13 FACULTY HOME, furnished, one year beginning Sept. NO 3-6829 evenings. 14 ROOMS FOR RENT for girls. % block from campus. 1218 Washtenaw. NO 8-7942 for arrangements. 012 FURNISHED: Campus apts., 1 or 2 bdrms. Boys, girls, families. Single beds. Stammer rates and fall rates. 344 S. Division. Also caretaker apt. Cl COOL COMFORT-Everything you want in an Ann Arbor apaartment. 5 FULLY AIR-CONDITIONED ROOMS T.V. * * * HI F * ** Modern Kitchen and Bath * * * Washing Machine *** Backyard and carport. HURRY - Call NO 2-3036 after 5 This is the way to live. C CAMPUS SPECIAL, summer rate, 5 room furnished apt., $90 Including utilities. NO 3-4322. 5 FURNISHED duplex, fine residential, $75. 812 Pauline at 7th. NO 5-6268 after 5 P.M. or Pontiac FE 2-6681. C7 ONE BLOCK from campus, modern apts. 514 So. Forest. NO 2-1443. Cl ON CAMPUS: A nice two room, fur- nished, all utilities, private bath, additional services. $80; with garage, $88.50. NO 8-7234. 2 AT 1011 E. UNIVERSITY, student rooms. For men at summer rates. Singles and double. Phone after 5 P.M. NO 8-8681. 04 FOR SALE FOR SALE: '51 Ford, Stinson airplane, student desk. NO 3-1531, Ext. 211. B3 BUSINESS SERVICES TYPING: Thesis, Term papers, reason- able rates. Prompt service. NO 8-7590. J11 5--4 -3 -2 -2 1 PREPARE FOR THE BLAST-OFF THIS WEEKEND by purchasing your "fuel" at RALPH'S MARKET (Formerly Freeman's) 709 Packard NO 2-3175 "Just two doors from the Blue Front" J2 Subscribe to The Michigan Daily LINES 2 3 4 MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES I DAY .80 .96 1.12 3 DAYS 2.00 2.40 2.80 Figure 5 average words to a fine. Call Classified between 1 :00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri. and 9:00 and 11 :30 Saturday - Phone NO 2-4786 WANTED TO RENT WANTED TO RENT: Two bedroom house or downstairs apartment, neigh- borhood suitable for pre-school age children. Twelve month lease. Send details to William Connors, Ohio Wes- leyan University, Delaware, Ohio. L2 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS LEARN TO PLAY Hammond Spinet or- gan. $15 per month, includes lesson in our studio. Rent a Spinet piano of your own choice-$10 per month. XI PERSONAL HELP, HELP, the ship of state is foundering- Mike, Monte, Betsy, Bill F4 ROOMMATE WANTED: To share spa- cious 5 room apartment, with swim- ming pool. $90 from now 'till Sept. 1. NO 5-7356. F20 Milli, See you Sunday. Monte F5 WANTED TO BUY URGENT: Want one 1959 Ensian, will pay any reasonable price. NO 3-1531, Ext. 297, 9-5 P.M. K7 TRANSPORTATION ERIE, PA. ride wanted. Sat., June 27. Ed Dey, NO 3-7272. G2 COMMUTERS to Dearborn. Rider or driver needed. LOgan 1-8709. G3 USED CARS FOR SALE: 1947 V.W. with custom fea- tures. Excellent condition. NO 3-3893. N '58 VOLVO $1,895 2 door! Blue finish! Mich. European Car Corp. Liberty at Ashley NO 5-5800 N7 '59 RED TRIUMPH - Hardtop, soft-top, W.W. tires, other extras. Dearborn, LO 1-0069. N4 TR 3 Triumph. Exceptional buy. All extras. NO 3-0857. N6 '56 OLDS cony., all power, white walls, leather seats, new top, sharp. $1,395. NO 2-1443. N5 1958 VOLKSWAGON, light gray, ex- cellent condition. Best offer takes. NO 3-1426. NI FORD, 1954 Custom V-8, Fordomatic. Good condition, extras. NO 5-6886. N2 , HELP WANTED MANAGEMENT TRAINING: Large Ea ern life insurance co. has opening local branch office for 2 men a want to build careers in life und writing andagency management. tensive training provided for th~ who can qualify. Salary while training plus contract which assu future financial security. Inqui treated confidentially. Write to7 Michigan Daily, Box 62. SUBJECTS NEEDED for Psych. expo Uent, Wed, Thur., Fri., of next we 7:30 to 9 p.m. $1 /hour. Come to tryouts Tues. evening at 7:30 p In And. A. of Angell Hall. Nat speakers of English only. LIFE GUARD: weekends. Call UPto 8-9715, Mrs. Markowitz or Mr. Bolt CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORI C-TED STANDARD SERVI( Friendly service is our busines Atlas tires, batteriesuand acoesso jes. Warranted & guaranteed. Be us for the best price on newL used tires. Road service--mecian- on duty. "You expect more from Standard and you get IV"~ 1220 S. University at Forest NO 8-9168 NEW ATLAS TIRES' "Gripsafe" in sets of 4; 4-670111 $58.75; 750x14, $74.95; (plus recap able tires and tax). Otherrsize comparably low. Tune-ups. Brak service. HICKEY'S SERVICE STATIC Cor. Main & Catherine NO 8-771 WHITE'S AUTO PAINT SHOP Bumping and Painting 2007 South State NO 2-3 ROOM AND BOARD ROOM and/or Board, excellent meals Tappan International House. CalN Griffee at N 5-5703. BOARDERS WANTED: Good food reasonable prices. Short walk fr campus. Call Hse. Mgr. at NO 2-8 BUSINESS PERSONAL MERRY ELLEN SCHOOL at 1706 Paul Blvd., Ann Arbor, invites you to roll your emotionally disturbed, slc learning, or retarded child. V school while still in session. Cos: July 1st. Telephone NO 3-3879.CI CAMPUS: 23 apartments, 2 hou modern, profitable. NO 2-1443., 6 DAYS 2.96 3.55 4.14 ast- in er- Ex- 1080 in res ries rhe H5 en- ek, the p.m. tive H4 wn_ ton. H3 ES 5. r- oi 82 5' 7 83 350 $1 sat Lrs El at omn. 312. ine en- Ow- isit ing ses, FF2 1 which has been breaking up. unusually Hairstyling for he whole family 0 10 BARBERS * NO WAITING PITTSBURGH (P) - Steady Louise Suggs and Marlene Bauer Hagge, shaking off a double bogey on the 17th, tied for the first round lead in the Women's Na- tional Open Golf Championship yesterday with 1-under par 71s. Mrs. Hagge, 4-under par for the first 12, ran into all sorts of trouble on the back nine of the Churchill Valley Country Club course, her own back yard, finish- ing five strokes over par on the last three holes. She drove into a creek on the 16th, put her drive into the woods and later in a trap on the 17th, and hit her second shot on the 18th into another creek. I Welcome to The Dascola Barbers near Michigan theatre Enter Fourth Round Six of the eight seeded men still are in the .tournament and four entered the fourth round today. Second - seeded Neale Fraser of Australia trimmed Michael Hann of Britain 7-5, 6-4, 6-2 and his Instruments Accessories Adjustments Repairs HASKAYLO'S STRING SHOP Fine Workmanships Has Its Voice Reach Semifinal Round Of NCAA Golf Tourney NOrmandy 3-3875 308 SOum STATE STREET ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN We Speciialize in the Art of Bar- .gQ WHITE HUT DARBEQUE PIT Catering to PARTIES, PICNICS and CUSTOM BAR-B-Q OPEN: Fridays 6:00 P.M.-3:00 A.M. Saturdays 1:00 P.M.-3:00 A.M. Sundays 1 :00 P.M.-Midnite FREE DELIVERY Service Anywhere in Ann Arbor Phone NO 3-4844 318 Beakes Street Ann Arbor, Mich. i ,. MMdW olomn"Po EUGENE, Ore. M-Walker Cup star Ward Wettlaufer of Hamilton dropped to the wayside yesterday as four collegians headed into tomorrow's 36-hole semifinal round of the NCAA Golf Cham- pionships. Bob Moser of Georgia trimmed Wettlaufer 1 up in the quarter- finals to join Yale's Ted Weiss, San Hose State's Jack Luceti, and Houston's Dick Crawford in the semifinals. Wettlaufer had dumped his Walker Cup teammate, Florida's Hold Women's Track Meet CLEVELAND (P)-The nation's women track and field stars gather here this weekend for the national AAU Championships. A field of 500 women and girls from 48 of the 50 states is ex- pected for the two-day meet which starts Saturday. Only Florida and Alaska are not repre- sented. Thedmeet, besides settling Na- tional Championships, will deter- mine entries in the Pan American Games and in a United States- Russia meet in Philadelphia July 18 and 19. As usual, defending champion Tennessee'State is expected to score heavily for top honors. State's Margaret Matthews will defend two titles - the 100-yard dash and"the broad jump. She also paced the Tennessee State 440-yard relay team at last year's National Championships at Mor- ristown, N. J. That relay team won the Na- tional Championship with a record time of 46.9 seconds. Later, in Moscow, the team defeated the Russians by running the 400- meter relay in 44.8 seconds. Tommy Aaron, 5 and 4, in the morning round. But Moser, who once suffered. from polio, picked up the 15th hole when Wettlaufer missed a three-foot putt and then they halved the final three holes. Luceti defeated Maryland's Del- mar Beman 3 and 2, Weiss scored a 2 and a victory over Syracuse's Warren Simmons, and Crawford edged Duke's Bob Zimmerman on the 21st hole. Wetlaufer led Moser 2 up after the eighth hole but Moser, who failed to qualify in last year's tournament, captured the ninth, 10th and 11th holes to go 1 up on the Walker Cupper. Wettlaufer pulled even with Moser on the 13th hole with a birdie but when Wettlaufer missed his 3-foot putt on the 15th and that cost him the match: Simmons found himself beneath trees on the 15th and 16th greens, losing both holes to Weiss to drop the match. Crawford won with a birdie on the 472-yard 21stshole after they had halved the first 2 extra holes with par golf. Crawford reached the 21st green in 2 strokes while Zimmerman was just off the green in the same number. Zimmerman chipped within six feet of the pin. Crawford needed two putts for his birdie and won when Zimmerman missed a six- foot putt. Luceti and Beman were even after five holes, but Luceti won the sixth, seventh and ninth holes with par golf and took the 10th with a birdie putt to go four up. Beman could win only the 14th. Defending champion Mickey Wright of 'San Diego, Calif., and Patty Berg, seasoned West Chi- cago, Ill., pro who won the first Women's Open in 1946, shared third place with 72s. Patty shot a pair of 36s and Miss Wright 35-37. Miss Suggs, in a determined bid for her third Women's Open crown, shot a steady even par 36, on the front nine of the tight 6,- 104 yard par 36-34-70 Churchill course and finished with a 35, one over par. She was strong on her iron at the short 7th to lose one stroke and three-putted the 15th from 40 feet to drop another one. She holed a 15-footer for a birdie on the' par 5 ninth. The most orthodox round of the four low scorers was played by Miss Berg. She hit 14 greens and used 34 putts, dropping a 15- footer for her only birdie at the 355-yard No. 8. The field of 29 professionals and 32 amateurs found par an elusive target. The field will be cut to the low 40's and ties after today's round for the rigorous double round climax on Saturday. Anne Quast, of Everett, Wash., National Women's Amateur Cham- pion, and Miss Betty Kerby of Akron, Ohio, led the amateur con- tingent with 75's, five over par. Also bracketed at 75's were Miss Ruth JesSen of Seattle, Wash., Mrs. Kathy Cornelius of Dayton, Ohio; Miss Joyce Ziske of Water- ford, Wis.; and Miss Wanda Sanches of Baton Rouge, La. Miss Barbara Romack, of Sac- ramento, Calif., former Women's National .Amateur Champion, fired a fat 81 and glumly remarked: "I'm glad that is over." Braves Sig~n Chicago .Lad MILWAUKEE (R) - The Mil- waukee Braves yesterday an- nounced the signing of first base- man George Kopacz, Jr., of Chi- cago to a contract with their Louisville Farm in the American Association. NEW SHIPMENTS of USED TEXTBOOKS arriving daily. NEW BOOKS IF YOU PREFER EVERETT'S DRIVE-IN "The Home of the Famous California Delux Burger" Electronic Curb Service 2280 WEST STADIUM BLVD. Near Wrigley's NO 5-5864 For that hard to find textbook - try SUMMER SCHOOL STUDENTS make WAHR'IS UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE Your Headquarters for TEXTBOOKS and SUPPLIES of All Kinds F OLL TT'S MICHIGAN BOOKSTORE 322 South State Street BOB GRAHAM, Mgr. I_ 11 The Book-Center of Ann Arbor Serving Michigan Students since 1873 316 South State NO 2-5669 A&W ROOT BEER presenting ROOT BEER at only 5c a glass Hot Dogs 0 French Fries and FRESH Pop Corn FEINER GLASS & PAINT CO. 216 W. William Street Ann Arbor, Michigan Ir-t--L MA 0 CI .A III T elephone rNQ a-au i I II I F Q _ lr ~ r -. . - . . I I I