FOURt THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRMfAV. VTi.'U11 i Q-ro FOUTHMIHGN DIL - 'VA VLI W rJAJ A u, V1luauJ Moyer Battles Jordan In Title Contest Tonight Campbell Leads rid Western Open Field PORTLAND, Ore. (P) - Denny Moyer, still in his teens, gets a crack at champion Don Jordan's welterweight boxing title tonight. Jordan, an experienced Los An- geles body puncher with a 45-11 record, wound up training yester- day by reiterating his belief he Plan- Bantam Return Bout LOS ANGELES (P) - Tentative plans were laid yesterday for a local rematch of Mexico's Jose Becerra, the new World Bantam- weight Champion, and Alphonse Halimi of France, the man he de- throned. Matchmaker George Parnassus said it would be within 90 days in the new Sports Arena, where Be- eerra scored a stunning knockout over the heavily backed French- man in the eighth round of their scheduled 15-rounder Wednesday night. Becerra thus became the first native of Mexico to win the un- disputed championship of the 118- pound division. Celebration of his victory, his 12th straight knockout and 16th straight triumph, continued yes- terday and will be resumed today when he flies to Mexico City. Halimi, the 27-year-old ex- champion, remained in semi- seclusion yesterday. His manager, Phillippe Filippi of Paris, collected hiis $65,000 guarantee.. He advised Parnassus the Ha- limi party will fly to New York today and leave there Monday for -ome. Halimi will rest a week or more and then undergo a thorough ;hysical checkup. "Then we will talk about the re- natch," said Filippi. will stop the fast, young Moyer short of the scheduled 15 rounds. It will be an outdoor bout at Portland Meadows Race Track. Promoter Tommy Moyer, Denny's uncle, said he expects a crowd of 10,000 and a gate of $100,000. The forecast is for fair weather with the temperature near 72 de- grees. The 25-year-old Jordan said he has a $70,000 guarantee. Young Moyer's cut has not been dis- closed. Moyer is 19 and has had 20 pro- fessional fights. He won them all. He also had 82 bouts as an ama- teur. He won the National AAU welterweight title in 1957, the year before he turned pro. From Fighting Family A member of a fighting Port- land family - brother Phil is a boxer, as were his father and uncle - he won his shot at the title with decisions this year over Gaspar Ortega and Vince Martin- ez, both highly regarded welter- weights. Ring Magazine ranks Moyer the No. 2 contender, the National Boxing Assn. ranks him No. 5. Should Moyer upset Jordan, he would become the youngest cham- pion ever in the welterweight di- vision. Both men are noted for their boxing skill, but for this bout at least Jordan will start with the reputation as the harder hitter. Moyer is convinced he will win -and for the same reason that has made Jordan confident; they faced each other in a training ring last year. Former Sparring Mate That was in September when Jordan was here training for a fight with Gaspar Ortega. Moyer was hired as a sparring partner and they went three rounds against each other on two sepa- rate days. Each is convinced he has solved the other's style. PITTSBURGH (R') - Chunky Joe Campbell, a former Purdue University basketball player, fired a course record 65 over the rolling hills and slick greens of Pitts- burgh Field Club yesterday to grab the opening lead in the par- busting first round of the West-; ern Open Golf Championship. Campbell came in early with his score, five below standard fig- ure, for the 6,625-yard layout. Staggering a bit on the final two holes, he barely missed a 63 which,; he said, would have made it "the, best round of my life."; With his lead score firmly re- corded, Joe had to sweat it out in the clubhouse as the local favor- ite made a final run for the lead. Burly Arnold Palmer, the former Masters Champion from Ligonier, Pa., stroked a smooth 34 on the front nine, then came home in 33 for a 67 in one of the last three- somes on the course. But that was good enough only for a tie for fifth place. Scores Low As expected, the sharpshooting golf tourists found the fairways and greens to their liking and 18 of the 127 starters in this 60th anniversary tournament matched or bettered par 70. So many good scores were re- corded that the midpoint in the big field was a scant 73 blows. This, of course, left just about everybody in the running and pointed to a possibility that the cutoff point for the low 50 and ties after today's second round might well be within four strokes of par. The brilliant 65 was a shot bet- ter than the previous competitive mark for the Field Club, a 66 post- ed by Chick Haibert of Northfield, Mich., in a qualifying round. for the 1953 Open. And that score was matched yesterday by Doug Ford, former Masters and West- ern Open champ. Campbell was great all around the course, getting by with only 29 putts and only once holing a really long one, a 40-footer for a birdie deuce on the 201-yard six- teenth. But at the seventeenth he banged a nine iron five feet from the pin and missed the putt, taking par four. And on the eighteenth he overdrove the green, chipped back to 12 feet and need- ed two putts to get down -- his only bogey of the day. He had 32 strokes on the front nine, 33 com- ing home. Ford Runner-Up Ford, the runner-up, had the day's most spectacular scoring shot on the same seventeenth that cost Campbell a stroke. Doug drove 240 of the 363 yards then lofted a nine iron to the green and into the cup for an eagle deuce. It helped him to a blistering 30 on the incoming nine, to improve his one-over par 36 at the half- way point. Palmer started fast with a bir- die on the 482-yard opening hole that carries the tee shot down a long hill. He hit an eight iron to within six inches of the pin and holed the putt, then added anoth- er birdie at six with a 30-foot downhill putt. A three-putt bogey on the -eighth slowed his attack but successive birdies on the tenth and eleventh holes gave him a chance to catch Campbell. A bo- gey on the 230-yard fourteenth set him back and another bogey on the seventeenth erased a birdie on the sixteenth. Jockey.Arcaro Set to Return NEW YORK OP) - Jockey Ed- die Arcaro, injured when his mount fell in the Belmont Stakes, returns to the saddle today. He has been assigned four mounts at Belmont Park today. Arcaro spent almost a week in the hospital following the acci- dent, then fished for another week in Canada. He suffered a mild concussion, sprained neck muscles and contusions of the left shoul- der in the June 13 race. Black Hills, his mount, fell after snap- ping a leg bone and had to be destroyed. 4 IN CHICAGO: Gunderson Paces Amateur, Tourney CHICAGO ()-Sturdy Jo Anne &runderson of Seattle, outdriving her state rival 20 to 70 yards, yes- terday defeated Anne Quast of Everett 5 and 4 to gain the semi- finals of the Women's Western Amateur Golf Tournament. Miss Gunderson, 20, the 1957 National Amateur Champion, was 2-up at the turn and closed out the featured match of the quar- terfinals 1-under-par for the 14 holes required. Miss Quast, the 1958 National titlist, had trouble with her short irons and chip approaches, leav- ing herself short innumerable times while -Miss Gunderson hit 12 out of 14 greens in regulation. 4, I. Miss Quast was 4-over-par on the tree-hemmed Exmoor Course which rambles 6,567 yards and carries a 37-38-75 standard. This was the fifth match-play meeting of the two Washington links foes in various tournaments since 1955 and it left the freckled Miss Gunderson with a 3-2 edge in the private series. The trim Miss Quast, runner- up in this meet last -year, never won a hole. She lost the first two as Miss Gunderson parred in reg- ulation then birdied with, a chip shot one foot from. the cup. They halved the next 7, Miss Gunder- son being 2-up with a 38 to her opponent's 40. Miss Gunderson unleashed blis- tering sub-par shooting to take the 10th with birdie 4 on another deadly chip, the 12th with birdie 3 on a 10-foot putt and the 14th with par 4 as Miss Quast again chipped short 12 feet. Miss Gunderson was so long off the tees that on the 350-yard 12th and 365-yard 14th, both of which she won, she used a wedge on her second shots. L OWEST PRICE EItER C OFFERED! I ONLY 4 $3995 _4 ""7 FEINER GLASS & PAINT CO. I 216 W. William Street Ann Arbor, Michigan Tennis Ace Olmedo Wins In European Tournament Telephone NO 8-8014 FAMOUS ARGUS C-3 COLOR-SLIDE CAMERA * World's most popular color-slide camera ... over 2 million in use s Has coupled rangefinder, 1/300 shutter, easy-to-use Color-matic settings . Two interchangeable accessory lenses available w Lifetime guarantee V ;,: ' We Have All Kinds of Glass-Mirrors and Furniture Tops We Have the Nationally Advertised Paints Also, we have complete glass service for foreign cars. BAASTAD, Sweden (AP) - Play- ing in 95-degree heat, Wimbledon champion Alex Olmedo of Peru yesterday defeated Thomas Hall- berg of Sweden, 5-7, 6-2, 6-1, 6-3, in the quarterfinals of the Baas- tad International Tennis Tourna- ment. Olmedo was Joined in the semi- finals by Jan Lundquist of Swe- den. Lundquist easily downed Norway's Thorvald Moe, 6-1, 6-1, Hajor League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. GB Cleveland 44 32 .579 - .Chicago 43 35 .551 2 Baltimore 41 38 .519 4% New York 41 38 .519 4 2 Detroit ' 40 40 .500 6 Washington 37 41 .474 8 Boston 33 45 .423 12 Kansas City 33 43 .434 11 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS (See night game results below) TODAY'S GAMES Baltimore at Washington (N) Detroit at Kansas City (N) New York at Boston (N) Cleveland at Chicago (N) NATIONAL "LEAGUE WV L Pct. GB Milwaukee 44 33 .571 - San Francisco 46 35 .568 - Los Angeles 47 37 .560 14 Pittsburgh 43 39 .524 3i/2 Chicago 39 41 .488 6 4' St. Louis 37 42 .468 8 Cincinnati 35 45 .438 10% Philadelphia 29 48 .377 15 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS (See night game results below) TODAY'S GAMES St. Louis at Philadelphia (N) Chicago at Pittsburgh (N) San Francisco at Cincinnati (N) Los Angeles at Milwaukee (N) Night Game Results San Francisco 3, Cincinnati 2 Los Angeles 1, Milwaukee 0 Philadelphia 11, St. Louis 0 St. Louis 6, Philadelphia 2 Pittsburgh 4, Chicago 3t Kansas City 5, Detroit 0 Kansas City 4, Detroit 0 Baltimore 8, Washington 0 Baltimore 5, Washington 0 Boston 14, New York 3 Chicago 4, Cleveland 3 6-3. Moe was the surprise con- queror of Barry MacKay, Davis Cup star from Dayton, Ohio, on Monday. The Peruvian ace of the U. S. Cup team next will meet the win- ner of today's quarterfinal be- tween Sven Davidson of Sweden and Ramanathan Krishnan of In- dia. Lundquist will oppose the vic- tor of the other quarterfinal be- tween Ulf Schmidt, Sweden's No. 1 player, and Luis Ayala of Chile. The semifinals will be played to- morrow. Both Olmedo, 23, and Hallberg, 22, wore broad-brimmed sun hats as protection from the sun during their hour and 20 minutes match. It was the hottest day of a rec- ord heat wave here. Most of the 2,000 spectators wore bathing suits or light sports clothes. Olmedo played at half speed. He handled his eager opponent like a fisherman who had hooked a trout. Hallberg rushed the net repeat- edly in the first set. Olmedo kept driving him back with precision lobs. The Swede scored with vol- leys but he had to work hard for his points while Alex maneuvered calmly from the baseline. In the second set Olmedo had Hallberg running from corner to corner. Alex stepped up the pace* of his drives and soon the young Swede was panting as he raced for the ball in the oppressive heat. Hallberg won the first game of this set but Olmedo swept the next ten and the match was as good as over. Id Ann rbor's Only Free Parking in Front of Our Store 6 WE HAVE BEEN SERVING THE COMMUNITY FOR 74 YEARS I 1116 S. University NO 5-6101 It I .F L j FOR THE LUNCH and DINNERS Fine Salads & Sandwiches FAMOUS FOR ROAST BEEF Serving your favorite BEER, WINES and CHAMPAGNE- Air-Conditioned - Open from 11 A.M. to 11 P.M. CLOSED TUESDAYS Recommended by DUNCAN HINES and GOURMET BANQUET FACILITIES AVAILABLE 2045 PACKARD NO 2-1661 Catering at Your Home or Hall - Picnics Henry Turner, Prop. FINEST IN FOOD . . V SELECTIONS FROM OUR DINNER MENU V, One-Half Tender Milk-Fed Chicken $2.10 Disjointed and Fried to a Golden Brown L. SUPREMACY in "Hair Styling stands out predominantly when done Here. 715 North University Broiled Fresh Lake Trout . The Aristocrat of the Great Lakes ...$2.40 Recommended .. by Duncan Hines .. by the Gourmet Club . . by the AAA . . and'by hundreds of regular guests. Luncheons, 11:30 to2:00 Dinners,5:00to7:00 Sunday: Dinners, 12:00to3:00 Closed Mondays -x . EVERETT'S DRIVE-IN "The Home of the-Famous California Delux Burger" Electronic Curb Service 2280 WEST STADIUM BLVD. Leo Ping Say: Take that break between your studies p and come down to Leo's. We have the finest in food to offer you. Enjoy the finest in Cantonese and c American Food VealCutlet . . Rolled in country-fresh egg and bread crumbs, served with Tomato Creole Sauce. Broiled Cenfer-Cut Jersey Pork (hops . . . . " N w B .-m P ___--- We suggest that you telephone for reservations. VOze Corner floue S. Thayer at Washington in Ann Arbor A block west of Rackham Bldg.-NO 8-6056 s x2.10 $2.10 Young tender chops served with cranberry applesauce j Baked Hickory Smoked Ham Steak $2.20 Skillfully broiled to perfection, French fried onion rings wI Near Wrigley's NO 5-5864 The GOLDEN APPLES Restaurant ... I' Broiled Tenderloin Steak. Served with glazed pineapple ring Broiled Spring Lamb Chops Mint jelly, three chops . 3.40 IS.O ._ _ _ ®. _ . . _ _ . ail .7 lkll 1111 'II 11