TILE MICHIGAN DAILY 4 WEDNESDAY, THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY. ,. edo ICAGO (P) - Alex Olmedo, I ly awaited, arrived from Eu- Pe yesterday at the National te ourt Tennis Tournament site, m never set foot on a tennis he' tead, he sped off in a taxi to no 'erry Jones, captain of the cia d States Davis Cup Team, to so prepared for a dinner in rot of Jones and the team, ran i upset Australia in the chal- J Misses First Matches Sikes Leads Qualifying In Publinx Tournament nge round last year. Olmedo, of ru and Los Angeles, was the am's star, winning two singles atches and a doubles contest. He was stopped at the gate when arrived here because he was t recognized. Tournament offi- ls went out to hurry his route the court and a delayed second and singles match with un- nked Gordon Fleming of Flint. But Olmedo informed them heI ecerra Plans Fight o Defend Bantam Title IEXICO CITY (') - Manager ncisco (Pancho) Rosales said night Jose Becerra, who has ailing leg, will be ready to give haonse Halimi of France a re- a match for the world ban- weight title within the con-, t period of ninety days. ecerra won the crown by cking Halimi out in the eighth and in Los Angeles last dnesday night. osales said he had been mis- erstood when he said Monday new Mexican champion could fight before ninety days. He he meant this relatively. The gager said the contract with chmaker George Parnassus s for a return bout between ind 90 days. :e said he does not want Be- a to fight at the first of the lay period but toward the end it. [ am completely sure" that erra will be ready then, he .. "We have a signed agree- it, and we will keep it." octors at the military hos- 1 said Monday that Becerra a pulled muscle in his left h and said he should remain ly inactive for 20 days. The rnpion" is not in the hospital, is taking' it easy except for s to various authorities. osales, asked about a report Becerra would fight Ramon is in Caracas on Aug. 22, said no definite agreement had been made for the bout. He said he talked with a Cara- cas promoter in Los Angeles aboutp the possibility of such a bout but that nothing firm was settled. Such a fight now is definitely out of the question, he said, add- ing "Becerra will not fight with anyone until he meets Halimi." Rosales said Becerra may be able to start training in another two weeks. He said the Mexican champ first noted the pain in his leg while running during train- ing for the Halimi bout, Cup Drawings Moved Ahead MEXICO CITY (P) - Drawings to decide the lineup for the Aus- tralia-Mexico Davis Cup singles matches have been moved up a day to Thursday to give Mexico's most publicized tennis tourna- ment even more publicity. 7 Drawings were orig in ally scheduled for 24 hours ahead of the July 18 opening date, or Fri-1 day. But captain Harry Hopmanj of Australia. and Captain Manuel Rincon G a 11 a r d o of Mexico agreed to hold. the drawing Thursday. had to take care of other matters and could not play. He sped away without most of the crowd of about 750 spectators learning that the tournament's star had come and gone. Officials were disappointed but said they would welcome him again today at the suburban River Forest Tennis Club where he probably will have to play at least three matches in a single day. So will Barry MacKay of Day- ton, Ohio, who was due in last night from Europe to start his competition with a first round match against unranked David Nelson of Skokie, Ill. MacKay phoned tournament of- ficials earlier yesterday to say he would be in even later than earlier anticipated. Both he and Olmedo had been scheduled. to arrive yes- terday-one day after the start of the. tournament. Sally Moore and Gwyneth Thom- as, two of the nation's most pro- mising young women's stars, yes- terday whipped through first round matches under a broiling sun. Moore Takes Turber Miss Moore, 19, of Bakersfield, Calif., started slowly in her first, round match against Sarah Mae Turber, Evansville, Ind., and trailed. in the first set' 5-2. Then she loosened up, uncoiled, rocketing serves and charged to the net to humble her foe 7-5, 6-1. Miss Thomas, 18, Shaker Heights, Ohio, No. 2 nationally in the girls' ratings behind Miss Moore, pow- ered past Judy Peoples of Gary, Ind., 6-0, 6-1. The top two women's seeds, Mrs. Dorothy Head Knode, Forest Hills, N.Y., and Sandra Reynolds of South Africa, No. 1 foreign entry, moved up on first round byes. Mrs. Knode is trying for an un- precedented fourth championship here after retiring the trophy with her third title last, year. Men's and women's doubles ac-3 tion begins today. The tournament runs through Sunday. Men's singles play has assumed added importance with the an- nouncemeit by Perry Jones, United States Davis Cup Captain, that the 1959 Cup team will be named this weekend, largely on the basis of performances here. Selection will be different this year with the addition to the squad of about six of the nation's top juniors who will have full status with adult players. Schoendiensi Plans Return ST. LOUIS (A') - Red Schoen- dlienst, sawed off bat and all, may be back in the Milwaukee Braves' lineup by September as a part- time performer. The red-haired second baseman said so himself yesterday, almost nine months after being stricken with tuberculosis. Schoendienst's own version of spring training will begin late1 next month with the approval of Dr. William Werner, his personal physician. Dr. Werner cautioned that Red probably won't be able to play every day in September, but he said, "I don't expect any restric - tions on what he can do next year." Red said, "I don't know how much I can play and won't until1 I see how the legs and wind holdI up. "Right now I feel I can play nine innings," added the 36-year-i old infielder, his freckled face beaming. DENVER (I)-Defending cham- pion Dan Sikes, 28, University of Florida law student, sank a 12- foot side-hill putt for a birdie 4 on the final hole to snare medalist honors with 69-68-137 in the Na-, tional Public Links Golf Tourna- ment yesterday. Sikes' 68 put him five under par in the 36-hole qualifying play over the 6,617-yard par 71 Wellshire municipal course. The qualifying play Monday and yesterday trimmed the starting field of 150 to 64 for six rounds of match play starting today. Golfers who shot 150 had to play off to reach, the match play. Sikes' putt on the 18th hole edged him a stroke in front of Mat Palacio Jr., 43, San Rafael, Calif., auto salesman, Rich Casa- bella, 18, Louisville, Ky., and Dr. Don J. Keith, San Diego dentist who shared Monday's first round lead with 67. Casabella, in the same three- TENNIS STAR-Alex Olmedo is shown here playing at the Wimbledon Tennis Tournament in England last month. Olmedo, is expected to enter the National Clay Court Tournament at Chicago today after returning from Europe yesterday. AMERICANS CAN'T ENTERTAIN: Red Track Stars' Plans Stopped by Rain PHILADELPHIA (A') - Rain vetoed plans yesterday to enter- tain visiting Russian track and field stars here. A boat cruise, a visit to a tele- vision station, window shopping, inspection of American homes all were washed out. Instead, the Soviet guys and Goodwill Leads Ifachts In Trans- Pacific Contest (.) 4YS MAJORS HAVE SLIPPED BACK: Chandler Hits Major League Officials F1RANKFORT, Ky. (fP) - Gov.' B. (Happy) Chandler took a all windup yesterday and deliv- ed a roundhouse wallop at big ague baseball and some of its ading figures. C ommis sioner Ford Frick, ational League President War- n C. Giles, and minor league Iief George M. Trautman all rew critical comment from the entucky executive on his .61st rthday and the eighth anniver- ry of his retirement as base- all commissioner. He served oni 1945 to 1951. , "So far as leadership is con- erned, baseball is bankrupt," handler said. "Baseball liquidat- I the office of commissioner hen it refused to renew my con- 'act, and got just what the own- rs wanted when they named pli- ble Frick." Attacks Frick Chandler said: "Frick knows nothing of base- ill, and he spends more time in Laces like Toots Shors than he oes on baseball matters. He and rautman are more interested in olding their jobs, and pleasing ie major league ownersy than in elping baseball, the players and he fans. "Frick and Trautman end Giles re just time-servers, all work- tg for big salaries and big ex- ense accounts, and accomplish- ig nothing. "The office of commissioner was set up to restore public con- fidence in baseball, and to pro- tect the people and the players. The players have so little support from, and so little confidence inr Frick that they had to get their own representatives to fight for them. That lack of confidence on the part of the players would have caused me to resign - but Frick is interested only in the owners." Caliber Slipped Chandler said the caliber of major league baseball has slipped 25 per cent in the last few years, and predicted it will continue to deteriorate as the minor league training empire dwindles. "We have a limit on how little a fish can be caught," he said, "but baseball has no such limits on ball players. They've vetoed the rule which banned signing of high school and college players, and they're paying these huge bonuses to untried youngsters. "Major league ball players must be smart and mature - or at least mature. But you'll find a lot of kids up there who just aren't ready, and a lot of old timers who should have retired years ago. Baseball just isn't as good as it used to be. , "They hit a new low last week when they passed that rule to al- low inter-league trades without getting waivers. Frick was against it, but that made no difference to the owners. It just shows how much power Frick has. I just wouldn't have permitted it, no matter what the owners wanted." Rivalries Necessary On the third major league plan which is being studied, Chandler observed: "If baseball is to survive - andI I think it's headed for destruc- tion - you must have local ri- valries. Who cares whether the Phillies beat Los Angeles or San Francisco? You can't find out un- til the next day anyway, if they play on the coast. "The three-league answer is to set up one circuit on the east coast, one in the mid-west and one in the far west. It would cut traveling expenses and set up ri- valries which do not now exist. "I also think umpires should be handled only by the commission- er, and that they should be offi- cials of baseball -1 not of the National and American Leagues. That would get away from World Series and All-Star game inci- dents such as choke-up signs. Umpires should work in both leagues during the season." Start Channel Swim Season FOLKESTONE, England A) - Denis Pearson, 26-year-old South Rhodesian sergeant, yesterday swam the English Channel in 15 hours, 36 minutes -- the first swimmer to make the crossing this year. Pearson plunged into the water off France early yesterday and waded ashore at Folkestone about 1 p.m. (EST). The Rhodesian's successful swim across the 22 miles of water marked the start -of another Eng- lish Channel swimming season. By the end of September about a dozen swimmers - men and women - will have added their names to the list of Channel swimmers started by Capt. Mat- thew Webb in 1875. HONOLULU (A) - Ralph Lar- rabee's 161-foot schooner Good- will moved to the front yesterday as leaders in the Trans-Pacific Yacht Race neared the finish line. But because of her handicap, the Goodwill, only 188 miles from Honolulu just before dawn, was far behind in standings. The handicap leader was the Chubasco, of Newport Beach, Calif. The Chubasco was 215 miles from Diamond Head. Race officials said the leading boats probably passed Diamond Head last night or early today. The record, set by the ketch Morning Star in 1955, in 9 days, 15 hours, 5 minutes and 10 sec- onds. The Goodwill, with a crew of more than 50, had moved well south of the rest of the fleet, seeking better winds which brought her to the front. Most of the other boats were strung out northeast of the Hawaiian Island chain. At the 5 a.m. (HST) roll call, the schooner Constellation from Los Angeles was third in fleet po- sition - 232 miles from Hono- lulu. The Constellation is skip- pered by Sally Blair Ames, 19, the only woman skipper-owner in the race. She was in seventh place in fleet handicap standings but in first place in Class A handicap. Third in fleet standings was the Jada, a 56-foot yawl owned by George Stugis opofNweifthe by George Stugis of Newport Beach. She was 336 miles out. The Honolulu catamaran, Aikane, which was not allowed to compete in the race but made the run anyway, crossed the finish line at 7:30 a.m. yesterday. Her time was 9 days and about 221/2 hours. Owner Ken Murphy made the crossing to show the sea- worthiness of twin hull cara- marans. Sox Hire Norman BOSTON (P) - The Chicago White Sox yesterday announced they have hired Bill Norman, former Detroti manager, for a special scouting assignment. Norman was fired as the Tiger manager early this season and was replaced by Jimmy Dykes. The White Sox said Norman will scout the high minor leagues for the team. gals marked time sitting around the hotel lobby, as did their American counterparts. Both teams, however, expected to work out late in the day -- rain or no - for the weekend in- ternational track and field meet between U. S. and Soviet stars. The Russians spent most of their time sitting in little groups talking among themselves. Some stood outside under a canopy Watching the people and cars go by. The hotel is located on a busy downtown street. Reporters Gather Stories The lobby bustled with activity, too. Interpreters helped reporters gather information from the Russians, who, in turn used the interpreters to gather informa- tion about all they saw. "That's Filipe Alou and Willie Mays of the San Francisco Giants' baseball team," an inter- preter told one group of Russians. The interpreter seemed more im- In another corner two slim I nanother corner two slim Russian pole vaulters plied husky Don Bragg with questions about his pole vault technique. The Russians - Vladimir Bulatov, a teacher, and Igor Petrenko, a veterinarian were amazed at Bragg's size. The former Villa- nova star at 197 pounds is big fors a vaulter. "They were very intense in their questions and certainly en- grossed with my answers," Bragg said. "I think they want to buy the same type pole I use- to take home with them." Excludes Politics ' Asked if they'talked about any- thing besides sports, Bragg said: "If 'you mean politics, no. After all they're here for only a week and I'm not going to ask them what they think of Poland.' They're friendly, cooperative and interested in track." Frank Potts of the University of Colorado, head U. S. coach, said everything was r u n n i n g smoothly with Russian coach George Korobkov. "He's very co- operative," Potts said. "The only questions that came up were on the use of asphalt runways and the schedule of the broad jumping event. "The Russian jumpers are used to performing on clay runways. We are getting them needle spiked shoes suitable for asphalt. If they like it we'll use the as- phalt. If not, we'll go back to the regular runways." some with Sikes and Keith, holed out a spectacular No. 2 iron shot from 200 yards for a double eagle on the 477-yard par 5 18th. That gave Casabella a 69 to match his opening round score. Keith, missing a 12-foot side hill putt that curled away at the last second, finished with 71. Palacio had 69-69-138. Hal McComas, 24, Dallas favorite who shot 67 Mon- day, slipped to 72 and was brack- eted at 139 with Gene Dahlbender of Atlanta who shot 70-69. Following them were Gene Dix- on, Memphis, 69-72-141; Don Es- sig III, Indianapolis, the 1957 champion, 72-69-141; Rolf Dem- ing, Minneapolis, 72-70-142; Ray Patak, Dallas, 68-74-142; and Al Benefiel, Denver, 68-74-142. Dallas won the Warren G. Hard- ing Trophy for the team champ pion ship with a three-man ag- gregate score for the 36 holes of 425. On the team with McComas and Patak was Gene Towry. San Francisco was runner-up with 431. There will be two rounds of 18- hole matches both today and Thursday. The semifinals Friday and finals Saturday are over 36 holes. The winner receives an invi-. tation to play in the National Amateur Championship in Sep- tember without qualifying sec- tionally. Yacht Race To End Early MARBLEHEAD, Mass. (A') - Early afternoon Coast Guard re- ports indicate leaders in the Marblehead-Halifax, N. S. yacht race might finish last night, ear- lier than expected. Because of limited visibility in fog; the, Coast Guard cutter Yak- utat could not tell which craft Was in the lead. The 43-foot yawl Aquila, owned by George H. Clowes Jr., a Woods Hole, Mass, doctor, was sighted at noon headed northeast, tabout 24 miles off Liverpool, N. S. The Aquila was carrying a spin- naker and rode a 10-knot, south, southwest wind. Visibility there was 300 yards. The Aquila is a Class C craft, much smaller than any yachts sighted in the area so far. Her position indicated that larger boats are near enough to Halifax for an evening finish. f' .1 '4 4 l4 r h. -4 HENRY H. STEVENS, Inc. LONG DISTANCE MOVING 1273 Broadway ..1" Flint 6, Michigan Bill Phone Collect Stevens Flint CEdar 4-1686 Manage For Lower Free Estimates Lit. '40 Interstate Rates Every Friday We own, operate, schedule and dispatch our own fleet of vans for better direct service without transfer. '" i. A new stoneware from Holland - 16-piece starter set $19.00. 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