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Show May 28 Tennis Symposium on the Ute Campus. This is the first such affair ever attempted in Utah and should be a real boon to the area a tennis program. Guest lecturers at the symposium will include Mary Hardwick, famed English women's tennis champion. Another top visitor will be BJ1 "Murphy, "Mur-phy, coach of the University of Michigan tennis team, and also Dave Freed of Salt Lake City along with Laurine Mickelsen. m Phone your news items to the Bingham Bulletin at PR 4-2636 or PR 4-2735. UNIVERSITY OF UTAH ATHLETICS Tennis The University of Utah tennis team took over undisputed first place in the Western Division race last Friday when they swamped BYU 7-0 in a dual match in Salt Lake City. Prior to this meeting both teams had been undefeated. This Friday these squads meet in a return ei!gnf;ement at Provo in what will either give the Utes the tiitle or throw the race into a two-way two-way tie between the Redskins and Cougars. Actually last Friday's affair was much closer tjian the 7-0 final tally indicates. Coach Buck Dixon's Cougars Cou-gars played some fine tennis and several of the matches could have gone either way. In fuct they were close enough that Utah Coach Ther-on Ther-on Parmelee is plenty concerned about Friday's tussle. Soys Parm, "We still aren't looking as good as we should. Wayne Pearce is having trouble rounding into shape and Steve Morgan is having his troubles. On the "Y" home courts we could have our hands full. I just hope we can be as lucky as we were last week." Parm plans to use the same starters start-ers this week as he did in last Friday's Fri-day's get-together. Pearce number one, Hy Saunders, two; Morgan, three; Steve Bennett, four and Richard Rich-ard Nordlund, five. The doubles will have Pearce and Saunders in the first and Morgan and Bennett in the second. Tennis Symposium The U. of U. will establish a first in the area when they hold their |