Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, May 19, 1961 KU Contends in Golf, Tennis The KU tennis and golf teams both have better than average chances to come home from the Big Eight meet today and tomorrow at Colorado with conference championships. Although Oklahoma State is favored in both competitions, KU is considered the probable runner-up in each, with good chances to replace the defending titlist Cowpokes. O-STATE IS TRYING FOR its fourth consecutive golf crown and All America linksman Jim Wright is aiming for an unprecedented third straight individual crown If Wright can cop his third title, he will surpass the existing mark of two wins in a row by KU's Bob Richards in 1955-56. Oklahoma State defeated Kansas by 43 strokes last year, and in addition to Wright return Labron Harris, runner-up in the 54-hole play at Iowa State. KU'S HOPES REST on a squid of Brien Boggess, Rod Horn, John Ward, Bill Elstun and Dick Haittbrink. Boggess shot 77-69-76 to place third last year. Horn, who will carry a 74 stroke average into the competition, finished tenth, nine strokes behind Boggess while Elstun and Ward came home twentieth and twenty-eighth respectively. The Jayhawker netmen, twice losers to the Cowpokes, are thought to have the best chance to dethrone the Orange and Black, as they nearly did last year. The Jayhawkers, coached by Jay Markley, carry a 5-5-1 season tally into today's 36-hole test, with the tie coming with the Cowpokes. MEETING IN SIX of the seven final matches, O-State took them all from KU performers and added another victory to win the conference title last year. Kansas outdistanced Oklahoma, 12-6 to finish nine points behind O-State. Coach Denzel Gibben's crew boasts a 9-5 mark for the season while the 'Pokes are 10-1-1, having lost only to powerful Wichita. In the two meetings of the teams, O- State posted a pair of 5-2 decisions. Individually, KU will have Mel Karrle, 11-4, Pete Woodward, 11-4, Jerry Williams, 8-4, Del Campbell, 13-2, and Jan Cobble, 12-3, at the singles with Woodward-Campbell and Karrle-Cobble in the doubles. Karrle was defeated by John Agnos in the finals at the number one singles last year, 4-6, 6-1, 6-0, and Woodward lost to Ron Anglemeyer at the second spot, 6-4, 1-6, 6-3. Both Agnos and Anglemeyer are back to defend their titles as is Bob Shaver at the fourth slot. Student ID's Good Student identification cards will admit students to the Varsity-Alumni football game tomorrow at 1:30 p.m. in Memorial Stadium. Regular tickets are $1. The game will be broadcast by Tom Hedrick and Dick Harp over KLWN, KJAY, and KANU. CLEVELAND — (UPI) — Boating is booming in Ohio. Boating Boom Hits Ohio — Ranks it 5th The Buckeye State now ranks as the fifth largest boating state, ahead of even Florida, and the tidal wave of sales shows no sign of an ebb. There are more than 10,000 boat docks between Mentor and Cedar Point, an 85 miles stretch, including the Port of Cleveland. In that area alone are more than 25,000 small boats. Studio de Portra 912 Mass., Lawrence — VI 2-2300 This certificate entitles you to 1 (8x10) enlargement of your child for just $1.95 plus .05 tax. You will have a generous selection of proofs to choose from. No appointment is necessary. Offer expires June 1, 1961. Terrill's Sports car spice never came in so many varieties...Chevrolet! Maybe you're a fellow with more or less normal driving habits who's looking for a change of pace. Or maybe you're a red-hot sports car buff. Either way, you'll find the fastest relief for that tantalizing itch in your driving foot at your Chevrolet dealer's One-Stop Shopping Center. He's got cars that run the sporting gamut like no others—nimble Corvair Monzas (2- or 4-door), charged-up Impala Super Sports (in five different body styles) and the kingpin of production sports cars, the Corvette. You can take your choice without chasing all over town. They're all stablemates under the same roof! CHEVROLET CHEVY CORVAIR MONZA CLUB COUPE Nestle behind the wheel in one of those bucket front seats and see what Corvair's rear-engine design has done for driving. Steering that responds to the subtlest hint. Braking that brings you to precise even-keel stops. Traction that clings like a cocklebur. CORVETTE It's the goingsest machine in America. Pure-bred sports car performance —the likes of which only the most elite (and expensive) foreign-built jobs could claim before Corvette began stealing their thunder in open competition. See the new Chevrolets at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's