THE MICHIGAN DAILY "'Hard Victorious at Wimbledon, Enters Fin FA GE . WIMBLEDON, England (R) -- Happy-go-lucky Darlene Hard smashed and volleyed her way yesterday into the women's finals of the Wimbledon Tennis Cham- pionships where she will try to keep intact a 21-year unbroken string of American victories. In the title round Saturday, the bouncy one-time waitress from Montebello, Calif., will play 19- year-old Maria Bueno of Brazil, who thwarted an all-American climax by beating Sally Moore of Bakersfield, Calif., 6-2, 6-4. Miss Hard-sometimes brilliant,' sometimes wild, but never cau- tious - smothered Sandra Rey- nolds' backcourt steadiness with net-rushing pressure- and con- quered the South African girl, 6-4, 6-4. This is the second time in the last round for Darlene, who bowed to Althea Gibson in 1957. Miss Gibson, who won the last two years, is on temporary leave from competition and did not defend. Miss Bueno's presence in the finals raises the possibility of an all-South American sweep of the singles titles. Today top-seeded Alex Olmedo, the lend-lease U.S. Davis Cup ace from Peru, meets Australia's 20-year-old giantkiller, Rod Laver, for the men's crown. , Never before in this grand- pappy of all tennis tournaments ARCHIE IS HURT: Postone Title Bout, Moore's Handler Asks MONTREAL (P) - Jack (Doc) Kearns, manager of Light-Heavy- weight Champion Archie Moore, said yesterday he is, seeking a postponement of Archie's July 15 championship fight here with Canada's Yvon Durelle. "I just asked Eddie Quinn (the promoter) for two weeks' post- ponement," Kearns said. "Archie picked up a very bad stone bruise in his heel." Quinn, Montreal* wrestling and boxing promoter, said he wouldn't know before noon today whether he would be able to postpone the fight. Kearns said a doctor looked at the bruise and advised him to postpone the fight, the second championship meeting between Moore and Durelle. Quinn said he would have a Montreal Athletic Commission doctor look at the heel too. "It'll take three or four or five days before Moore can do any road work," Kearns said. "He could'nt jump around with it. He worked out today on his toes punching the bag., "This is a tough fight and he's got to be ready." Kearns said Moore picked up the bruise several days ago. But he hadn't mentioned it. The word in Montreal is that 01' Archie has been having weight troubles. He has looked heavier than the 180 pounds Kearns says he weighs. Bradley Leads' Flint Tourney FLINT ()--Little known Monte Bradley grabbed the early lead in the $52,000 Flint Open Golf Tournament yesterday with a four-under-par 68. The 28-year-old Texan who has been on tour only since February carded a 33-35-68 with most of the field still out on the Warwick Hills Golf and Country Club lay- out at nearby Grand Blanc. Only two other players among the early finishers were able to break par, which is 36-36--72 at the sprawling layout which norm- ally plays 7,280 yards.; has a South American player gone as far as the finals. The U.S. women's dominancy traces back to 1938, the year after Dorothy Round of Britain won the title by beating Jedwiga Jed- rzejowska of Poland. Since then there has been a steady succes- sion of U.S. victors, including such as Helen Wills Moody, Alice Mar- ble, Pauline Betz, Louise Brough and Maureen (Little Mo) Con- nolly. During that period America produced both finalists in all but three years. hey were 1939, 1956 and 1958 when Kay Stammers, Angela Buxto nand Angela Morti- mer, all British, were respective runners-up. Miss Hard, 23, has a powerful first service-one of the hardest in women's tennis - and a fiat forehand drive which she smacks with unfemine gusto. She is a constant attacker, going boldly for the corners and lines and letting doublefaults and errors fall where they may. . Bueno Confident In Miss Bueno, Darlene meets a. poised and confident girl who has tennis maturity beyond her 19 years. "I always wanted to be the world champion," Maria said after beating Miss Moore. "You can be sure I'm going to play my best in the final. I am at the peak of my game." The two finalists have met four NL Writers Honor Face CINCINNATI (Al) - Elroy Face, brilliant relief pitcher forthe Pittsburgh Pirates, yesterday was announced as winner of the Na- tional League's "Player of the Month" award for June. Face, who made 14 relief ap- pearances, won five games to run his season record to 12-0, andl posted an exceptional earned run average of 0.37 in 23% innings. He fanned 18 and walked only three batters. He not only won the award from sterling competition, but he re- ceived the greatest number of votes a player has received from the committee of baseball writers and broadcasters who select the winner each month. Face got 30 votes out of a pos- sible 40. Second place went to another Pirate-Dick Stuart, the valuable first baseman with the home run bat. Stuart, who got 4% votes, hit .427 in June and drove in 22 runs in 26 games. He also hit ten homers. One of those home runs, made on June 5, was the first ever to clear the center field fence at Forbes Field, Pittsburgh. Ken Boyer, third baseman for St. Louis, got 2% votes for third place and Sandy Koufax got 2. Don Newcombe, Cincinnati, got 1 vote. Koufax, in addition to striking out 16 Phils on June 22, won four games without a defeat, registered an earned run average of 1.23 in 45 innings, struck out 46 and walked 17. Big Don Newcombe also won four games without a defeat in June and turned in a highly re- spectable earned-run average of 2.09. The Redlegs righthander worked 43 innings, struck out 23 and walked only five. He also starred as a pinch hitter.. Members of the 40-man com- mittee facd a difficult task in their June selection.Other players who commanded consideration were: Orlando Cepeda, San Francisco, who hit .368 and drove in 28 runs in June; Jim Gilliam, Los Angeles, .431 in 30 games; Frank Robin- son, Cincinnati, .363 and drove in 18 runs. times in the past. Miss Hard won them all. "I was pleased with my game today,," Darlene said. "My game has improved since Althea beat me two years ago." Miss Hard broke Miss Reynolds' girlish service in the seventh .game for a 4-3 lead without yielding a point and then easily ran out the first set. Californian Wild The blonde California girl, hit- ting all-out, ran up a 4-2 lead in the second set before running into a streak of wildness. The South African pulled even at 4-4 but proceeded to drop her serv- ice again in the hard-fought ninth game. Miss Reynolds saved three match points in the tenth game ,but on the fourth dumped a forehand into the net. Miss Moore, 19, Wimbledon girls winner a year ago, seemed both- ered by the gusty wind which whipped across the center court. Miss Bueno, hitting deep well- placed drives, went ahead 4-1 in the first set. Miss Moore served two aces to win the next game but the Brazilian ripped through the next two games. Miss Moore, down 3-5 in the second set, made a fight of it by breaking Miss Bueno in the ninth game, with the latter double- faulting at game point. But Miss Bueno rebroke Miss Moore in the 10th for the set and match. An all-Australian final devel- oped in men's doubles. Top-seeded Neale Fraser and Roy Emerson whipped Torben Ulrich of Den- mark and stateless Lazlaw Legen- stein 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 to go against teammates Laver and Bob Mark. The latter upset second-seeded Nicola Pietrangeli and Orlando Sirola of Italy 6-4, 6-4, 6-3. HENLEY, ON - THAMES, Eng- land (R) - Harvard's undefeated heavyweights and lightweight eight-oared crews stroked to im- pressive triumphs yesterday as five American entries advanced in the Royal Henley Regatta. The other U.S. winners were Navy Lt. Harry Parker of East Hartford, Conn., and the Vesper Boat Club of Philadelphia in the diamond sculls; the Union Boat Club Eight of Boston, and the Belmont Hill (Mass.) School Quartet. Princeton University's Cottage Club Four was the only American casualty on the windswept Thames. The Pickup Quartet ran into one mishap after another and bowed to the Et. Thomas Hospital Four in the Wyfold Cup Competition. Trounce London Harvard's varsity trounced the London Rowing Club by 5 lengths in 7 minutes, 21 seconds for the mile and 550 yard race against the current in a Grand Challenge Cup heat; the Crimson, 155- pounders won by the same margin over Oriel College of Oxford in 7:20 in the Thames Challenge Cup eliminations; Parker scored by 2% lengths in 8:54 over Eng- lish Champion J. M. Russell; Union edged the Vesta Rowing Club of London by a half-length in 7:23 of the Thames Cup com- petition, and Belmont rallied to beat the Imperial Boat Club c London by a half-length in 8:1 of the Wyfold Cup Heats. Both Harvard eights got ou in front at the start and led al the way while under-strokin their rivals. The Harvard varsit was the outstanding boatload o: the Thames yesterday. Semifinals Today Today, Coach Harvey Love' Eastern Sprint Champions wil meet the formidable Isis Boa Club of Oxford in the semifinal Isis is the club in which the bes Oxford rowing talent has bee: concentrated this year. Both the Harvard lightweight and Union Boat Club reached, ti quarter-finals of the Thame Challenge Cup Competition. Hal yard is the defending champion, The Harvard Eight had to mak a last-minute 'substitution for ail ing Melville Hodder but it a: parently didn't make much differ ence in the smooth run of th shell. Kingsbury Chase, a mem ber of last year's Harvard Eighi subbed for Hodder, Record Catch SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico ()- Blue Marlin weighing 7801 lbi was caught near here Wednesda; erasing the listed world record c 756 pounds which had stood (C two years: FIVE U.S. ENTRIES ADVANCE: Harvard Oarsmen Wi In British Cornpetitioi two years CAE TO UH ;Rri- ON THE BA TH AMERICANS ELIMINATED: Bullock Paces British Open Tourney lv*u j mru= u, zownu -gthr36hl ttlsQ 18o Little-known Fred Bullock of Eng- gether T-hole totals of 14 or land carved his second straight better. Thomson, a four-time wi- sub-par round-a 70-through the ner, sneaked in at 148 with his wind and rain yesterday and took second straight 14. a two-stroke lead at the halfway Bullock, a 40-year-old profes- point of the British Open Golf sional playing his second tourna- Chamipionship with a score of 138. ment of the year, scrambled out Chapihip withn f of the bunkers and rough to, add Weather conditions were so foul his 70 to an opening round 68. He that all four of the U.S. con- refused to let the, weather bother tenders-Willie Goggin, Bob Wat- him. son, Bob Sweeny and John Gar- In second place at 140 came rett-shot themselves -out of the Flory Van Donck, the dapper world tournament and the defending traveler from Belgium, with a champion, Peter Thomson of Aus- second straight 70. Three British tralia, barely 'survived the cutoffplayers ewer tied for third at 142. The field was reduced to 48 They were Arnold Stickley, who players who were able to put to-. added a 74 to his first round 68; MSU Ice-Skating Program Attracts Top Performers Reg Knight, who shot 71, and a 24-year-old Walker Cupper, Mi- chael Bonallack, with a 72. The tournament was shorn of an American contender for the first time since World War II. Sweeny, the graying former British Amateur Champion from Palm Beach, Fla., made a strong run at it but his putter failed him at critical moments. He took a 73 for 151. Watson, a pro from Ardsley- On-Hudson, N.Y., failed with a 71 after an opening 82 but his score of 153 left him far out of the running. Putting also proved Wat- son's undoing. Both Garrett, a 23-year-old Houston, Tex., amateur, and Gog-' gin, the 53-year-old World Senior Professional Champion from San Jose, Calif., had 80's. Garrett finished with a 36-hole score of 156. Goggin had 158. Garret missed six putts of under six feet and three-putted the final two greens. Goggin, playing the last nine holes in a pouring rain, also had his main miseries around the greens. Just last Friday, the defensive back announced he wasn't coming back and would devote his time to studying law at his alma mater, Mississippi. It came a little later there was a matter of money involved. The Colts paid Brown $9,500 last year and gave him a bonus of $1,500 for signing as their fifth draft choice.. The Colts offered to start nego- tiating this year's salary at the same base pay as 1958, $9,500. Brown wanted to begin at $11,000. A stalemate developed and Brown in effect went on strike., Coack Weeb Ewbank of the Colts got on the telphone to Brown and it was settled yesterday, DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) Work, Permanent Employment, princi- pally in Southwestern Michigan. B.S., M.S., & Ph.D.: Civil Engineering; M.S.: Construction. Interviews may be ar- rangedby signing schedule on bulletin board opposite Room 347, West Engrg. Bldg. Organization Notices (Use of this column for an- nouncements is available to offi- cially recognized and registered or- EAST LANSING - Michigan State is the summer ice skating capital of the United States again this year. A glamorous assemblage of 135 of the nation's top amateur ice skating stars have gathered at MSU's Eleventh Annual Summer Ice Session, the largest summer program of its kind in the coun- try. The intensive eight-week train- ing period, June 27 to August 22, has drawn champions of every kind.I Among the performers registered are Women's World Champion Carol Heiss; her sister Nancy, runner-up to Carol for the Na- tional Senior Women's title, and Don Jackson, Canadian and.North American Senior Champion. There are present eight gold medal winners in all, including Bradley Lord of Boston, Shirra Kenworthy, Diane Lapp, Eleanor McLeod and Sandra Tewkesbory. The session is sanctioned by the U.S. Figure Skating Associa- tion, and it is the most rigorous and complete training schedule the skaters will have before the National Championships in Janu- ary and the Olympic Trials in February, said Session Manager Norris Wold. "Besides the .top skaters in the United States, we've also assem- bled the finest teaching staff," Wold said. The staff includes Pierre Brunet of the New York Skating Club; Montgomery Wilson of the Boston Skating Club; William Sywallender Skating Studio, Detroit; and Jean Arlen Jordan and Beryl William- son, of the Lansing Skating Club. Each skater works out six hours a day, Monday through Saturday. Practice periods begin at 5 a.m. and end at 4 p.m., with a break from 10 a.m. until 1 p.m. Saturday afternoons and Sundays are open for public skating. young Boxer Plays .Favorite ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (/P--Un- ranked Lenny Matthews, a 20- year-old puncher from .Philadel- phia, yesterday was rated an 8-5. favorite to beat. veteran light- weight contender Johnny Gon- salves of Oakland, Calif., tonight. They meet in the radio-televi- sidn ten rounder in a convention hall ballroom. Gonsalves, 28, is ranked fourth by Ring and sixth by the National Boxing Assn. Matthews was a member of the top ten list until 'he was beaten this year by Paulie Armstead and stopped in the sixth by leading contender Carlos Ortiz. Read Daily Classifieds UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN STUDENT CHAPEL AND CENTER 1511 Washtenow Avenue (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) Alfred Scheips, Pastor David Schramm, Vicar Sunday- 9:30 A.M. Bible Study. 10:30 A.M. Worship Service. Tuesday- 7:15 P.M. Discussion Group. LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER AND CHAPEL National Lutheran Council Hill St. at S. Forest Ave. Henry 0. Yoder, Pastor Sundy-9:30 A.M. Bible Study. 10:30 A.M. Worship Service EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH E. Washington & 5th'Ave. 10:00 A.M. Sunday School. 1 1:00 A.M. Church. 7:30 P.M. Sunday Evening Worship. THURSDAY- 7:30 P.M. Weekly Prayer Meeting. ANN ARBOR FRIENDS MEETING (Quakers) 1416 H i llStreet NO 2-9890 Sunday: 10:00 A.M. Meeting for '&orship BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL REFORMED United Church of Christ 423 South Fourth Ave. Rev. Ernest Klaudt, Minister Mr. Jack LaMar, Student Pastor 10:45 A.M. Worship Service 7:00 P.M. Student Guild, 524 Thompson CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH 1131 Church St. Dr. E. H. Palmer, Minister 9:30 A.M. Bible classes. 10:30 A.M. Morning worship service. 'How a Man Can Be Right with God." 7:00 P.M. Evening worship service. "The Faith of our Fathers. If The Faith of anAverage Man." MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH Hill and Tappan Rev. Russell G. Fuller, Minister 9:00 Morning Worship. Sermon Topic: "The Patriots Nations Need." Rev. Russel Fuller. THE STUDENT GUILD: Folk Singing, led by Grey Austin. Guild House, 6:30 P.M. ST. ANDREWS CHURCH and the EPISCOPAL STUDENT FUONDATION 306 North Division Street 8:00 A.M. Holy Communion followed by Break- FIRST METHODIST CHURCH AND WESLEY FOUNDATION 120 S. State St. Hoover Rupert, L. Burlin Main, Eugene A. Ransom, Ministers 9:00 and 11:00 A.M. Worship: "A Tide for Uni- rty." Dr. Hoover Rupert, preaching. 9:30 - 10:30 A.M. Bible Study and Discussion. 2:00 P.M. Meet at Wesley Lounge for picnic outing at nearby lake. GRACE BIBLE CHURCH Corner State and Huron Streets William C. Bennett, Pastor 10:00 A.M. Sunday Schoot University Class 11:00 A.M. Worship Service. "The Spirit Fills Life"-Morning "Conflict & Conquest"-Evening 5:45 P.M. Student Guild. WE WELCOME YOU! ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL William and Thompson Streets Rev. John F. Bradley, Chaplain Rev. Paul V. Matheson, Assistant Sunday Masses 6:30; 8:00, 9:30, 11:00 A.M. and 12:00 noon. Holiday Masses 6:30, 7:00, 8:00, 9:00 A.M., 12:00 noon and 5:10 P.M. Weekday Mosses 6:00, 6:30, 7:00, 8:00, 9:00 A.M. Novena Devotions: Wednesday evening, 7:30 P.M. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Ave. 9:30 A.M. Sunday School 1 1:00 A.M. Lesson Sermon. Reading Room306 E. Liberty. 10:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. Daily. Monday 7:00 P.M. to 9:00 P.M. FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH of Ann Arbor, Michigan Washtenaw at Berkshire Edward H. Redman, Minister Summer Sunday Evening Series "Spectrum of World Problems" 8.00 P.M. "African View." Douglas D. Crary, As- sociafe Professor, Geography Department, U. of M. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 502 East Huron Dr. Chester H. Loucks and the Rev. Hugh D. Pickett, Ministers. 9:00 A.M. Family Worship. 9:50 A.M. Student Bible Class in the Campus Center. 1 1 :00 A.M.: Worship and Communion: "Remem- ber." Dr. Chester H. Loucks preaching. 4:00 P.M. Student Picnic. Meet at the Campus Center. Ann Arbor's New SELF SERVE LAUNDRY Air-Conditioned . .. OPEN 24 HOURS ... coin-operated WASH-20c ... DRY-10c, CWt a4 1928 West Stadium Blvd. I _ ~. --- ---- 11 1, B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION 1429 Hill Street AN NOU NCES These activities for the summer session ..,. TRANSISTOR RADIOS July 4th Special 1. FRIDAY EVENING SABBATH SERVICES * Weekly starting Friday, July 3, 7:30 P.M. 2. SUNDAY SUPPER CLUB " Alternating weeks starting Sunday, July 5, 6 P.M. " Featuring kosher delicatessen 0 Followed by variety program, films, music PRESBYTERIAN CAMPUS CENTER at the First Presbyterian Church 1432 Washtenaw Avenue, NO 2-3580 Miss Patricia Pickett, Acting Director SUNDAY- Worship at 9:00 and 10:30 11:30 A.M. Coffee Hour WEDN ESDAY- I 11 I I