THE MICHIGAN DAILY -0 T RnSnAY THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY. .acKay Eliminated, Olmedo in Finals SENATORS LIKE BASEBALL: Third League Backers Get Congress Support IMBLEDON, England WA')- -seeded Alex Olmedo marched id with machine-like effici- * but his U.S. Davis Cup team- e, Barry MacKay, bowed out bing in a marathon flve-setter erday in the semifinals of the nbledon Tennis Champion- is Lmedo, losing only one service master all the way, erased ralia's No. 2 ace, Roy Emer- in exactly 60 minutes, 6-4, 6-4. 2e storied center court, how- proved heartbreak house for Kay, the lumbering slugger i Dayton, Ohio, who gave it ything he had but still went a before Rod (The Rocket) er, a 20-year-old Australian gander. aver won 11-13, 11-9, 10-8, 7-9, in a match which swayed back forth 'for 3 hours and 45 utes. The bitter, exhausting ggle reached its high point in fourth set when MacKay, .ing 2-5 at one stage, fought five match points and finally the set to level the match. COLLEGIATE HAIRSTYLING To Please You! 0 Outstanding Personnel :rAir-Conditioned * Good Service THE DASCOLA BARBE near Michigan Theatre He shot ahead 3-1 in the deci- sive fifth set but confidence and control suddenly deserted him and Laver reeled off five games in a row. "No excuses," MacKay puffed later. "Laver was too good, that's all. I seemed to lose my confi- dence." Double-faults-and old affliction for the power-hitting Yank-came, up to haunt MacKay again. He served 25 double-faults in all,. a half-dozen in the vital fifth set when every misplaced shot put him a step nearer elimination. Olmedo Favored Now Olmedo, the Peruvian liv- ing and going to school in Los Angeles, is overwhelmingly favored to take the title earmarked for him ever since he carried the United States to victory in the Davis Cup challenge round last December. Laver is a junior member of the Australian Davis Cup Squad who is better known for his doubles proficiency than. for singles. He was unseeded in the tournament-- the second unseeded player since World War II to gain the last round. Kurt Nielsen did it in 1953 and 1955. The bronzed Olmedo, a descend- ant of the Incas, hardly had a workout. against Emerson, a 22- year-old Queenslander from sub- tropical Brisbane. In the opening set the.happy- go-lucky "chief"-as friends call him-broke Emerson in the open- ing game ,and ran up a 2-0 lead. Emerson rebroke in the fourth but Olmedo cracked the Austra- lian's delivery with sharp back- hand service returns in the seventh and then rode out the set. Second Set Easy 'The second set was a slaughter. It lasted 12 minutes and Emerson never had a chance against Ol- medo's artistic but destructive at- tack. In one game Emerson lost his service without winning a point. The third set followed servicef for eight games. In the ninth Alex got Emerson down 15-40 on the Australian's service with crisp, angled returns, forcing volleying errors, and then he won it with a beautiful passing shot, climaxing a long rally. Four big shots gave Olmedo the final and clinching game at love.- The first three sets were a battle of MacKay's thunderbolt serve and volley game and the lightning re- flexes of the bandy-legged redtop from down under. In the fourth set Laver had three first, aced him cleanly with a can- match points at, 5-2 with MacKay nonball on the second and made serving. But the American forced him miss a running forehand on him into a volleying e'rror on the the third. NEW YORK OP) - Bill Shea, chairman of Mayor Robert Wag- ner's New York Baseball Com- mittee, disclosed an ace in the hole yesterday in case baseball tries to balk his plans for a third major league. It's the U.S. Congress. Shea called a press conference to announce that he had been sum- moned to Washington by Sen. Es- tes Kefauver (D-Tenn.), chairman of the powerful Senate Judiciary Committee and head of a sub-com- mittee dealing with anti-trust and monopoly. "The senator was pessimistic about our chances of getting a green light from the major league club owners," Shea said. "He sug- gested that he might begin hear- ings immediately on his bill aimed at - baseball's monopolistic prac- tices. "I told him that I felt the base- ball owners were sincere in their announcement out of Columbus recently that they would talk to us about expansion and I urged him to hold off his hearings. He agreed." Shea didn't say so but he gave the impression that Kefauver is laying down the law to the dia- mond executives-approve the pro- posed new league or watch out. "I am sure the owners are con- scious of the tenor in Congress," Shea said. Shea is spearhead of the group which has set 1960 as a target for rounding up players. He said he and his supporters- generally referred to as the "five founders"-will be ready to submit a plan to baseball between July 15 and the second All-Star Game at Los Angeles Aug. 3. Scorer Says Sorry Sam' LOS ANGELES (P)-"I did it, Mw, and I'm sorry, for Sam Jones' sake. .. . but I'd call it the same way again." That's the way the official scorer of the Giant-Dodger game Tues- day night led off his story about a disputed decision that deprived Sam Jones of a no-hit, no-run game. The scorer who made the deci- sion is baseball writer Charlie Park of the Mirror News. He ruled that Dodger Junior Gilliam could have beat out an eighth-inning bounder that Giant shortstop' Andre Rodgers dropped, calling it a single. Jones thought it, should have been an error against Rodgers. The Giants won, 2-0. And Jones' performance went into the books as a one-hitter. INI W OAF'LKX CENTU RYl35A ITH & TR GG*R-ACTION' only 299" 1 Buy at rLOCK, STICKLEY WIN: Jninownp Golfers Lead Jritish Open Tournament FOLLETT' PHOTO DEPARTMENT State St. at N. University U.S. TENNIS ACE-Alex Olmedo, top-seeded in the Wimbledon tennis tourne±, got off to a winning start in his first match. Olmedo, Peruvian star of the U.S. Davis Cup team, is shown in action as he defeated Australian Warren Woodcook, 6-2, 6-4, 6-3. MUIRFIELD, Scotland (M--Two nknown British players, Fred hullock and Arnold Stickley, yes- erday shot 68 for the lead in the ritish Open . Golf Championship nd then sat back, and enjoyed hemselves as high winds and rain ent later scores rocketing. Bullock, a 40-year-old pro play- ng in only his second tournament his season, and 43-year-old Stick- ey got in their rounds before the ,806-yard, par 36-36-72 Muirfield ayout became a rough, tough test. Playing Made Difficult Early in the afternoon winds up o 40 miles an hour and short, harp rainstorms added three or our more strokes to the course. fflicted by these conditions and y greens that already were slow rom last night's rains, were Peter 'homson, the defending champion rom Australia, young Gary Player f South Africa and.several other avorites. Up to yesterday Muirfield had een fairly easy with dry, warm reather and virtually no wind. )nly Tuesday Thomson had shot record-equalling 66. Antonio Cerda, an Argentine pro laying in his 11th British Open, lso was out early in the easier onditions and finished one stroke ehind the leaders with a brilliant 3-36--69. Most of the three play- rs who had 70 and the seven who ad 71 also got in ahead of the rorst weather. Garrett Leads Americans John Garrett, 23-year-old ama- ajor League' Standtngs AMERICAN LEAGUE teur from Houston, Tex., was the best of the four Americans with 36-40-76. Four years ago Garrett, then a student at Rice, was run- ner-up to Joe Campbell in the U.S. National Collegiate Championship. He now is a soldier stationed in Germany. SWillie Goggin, World Senior Pro- fessional Champion from San Jose, Calif., took 39-39-78 and Bob Sweeny, veteran Palm Beach, Fla., amateur who has been runner-up in both the U.S. and British Ama- teur Championships, had 38-40- 78. Bob Watson, a pro from Ardsley- On-Hudson, N.Y., took 40-42-72 and commented bitterly that he never should have left his club. U.S. Rower Victorious HENLEY-ON-THAMES, England (A) - Harvard's unbeaten light- yeight crew made a fine start in defense of the Thames Challenge Cup yesterday as'the Royal Henley Regatta opened in drizzling rain. The Union Boat Club eight from Boston and two United States fours also won their opening heats on the narrow Thames river. American oarsmen suffered only one setback-a heartbreaking loss by the Schoolboy Eight from Phil- lips Academy, Andover, Mass. The Harvard lightweights rowed j with four of the same men who won the Thames Challenge Cup- No. 2 trophy for eight-oared crews in this unofficial world champion- ship of rowing. They won handily by two lengths from the Crowland Rowing Club of London but their style didn't satisfy their coach. "Technically Harvard didn't row too well," said Coach Larry Cool-' idge after seeing his boat cover the mile and 550 yards course against a moderate breeze in 7 minutes, 23 seconds. "The boys had a slight case of jitters. They did not know what to expect from English crews and I'm afraid they looked a little ragged." The time was somewhat slower than the record for the Thames: event. That is 6:45, set by the Princeton lightweights in 1953. SCORES Bacteriology 5, Education 3 Sawbones 7, Misfits 6 Chemistry 16, Speech 2 Ramblers 21, Trees 5 I I ~I Four's Enough 0.. 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