:1 0. THE M* 1960 THEM ubie Triumphs; ain Halts Meet I1 Special to The Daily EVANSTON -- Rain postponed play in the Big Ten Tennis Tour- nament here yesterday after only leven first-round matches had been played. Northwestern Coach Clare Ries- sen, director of the meet, said that play would be moved indoors to the University of Chicago Field- house if the rain continued. Gerry Dubie, last year's number two singles champion, was the only Michigan player to complete a match as he came from behind to defeat John Stoy of Iowa, 6-2, 5-7, 7-5. Dubie was down match point to Stoy but rallied to gain an opening round victory in num- ber one singles play. Dubie in Second Round When the meet is resumed, Dubie will be pitted against Joe Etkins of Illinois. Dubie was vic- torious in a previous meeting be- tween the two. The rain interrupted a match between Michigan's Frank Fulton and Minnesota's Ray Radosevich in the number two singles compe- tition. Fulton, two-year champion in number five singles, was leading 3-2 in the third set when the! match was stopped. The match will be resumed today, with the winner gaining the right to meet Tony Brown of Wisconsin. In a surprise move by Coach Bill Murphy, Ken Mike was re- placed in the number five- singles by Bill Vogt. Mike has had a dis- appointing year and was removed by a last-minute decision. Vogt did not play last year but saw action in 1958 as a doubles Tody's Matches SINGLES: Dubie (M) vs. Etkins (Ill.); Fulton (M) vs. Radosevich (Minn.) (suspended match); Wiley (M) vs. Olson (Minn.); Tenney (M) vs. Nadis (Iowa); Vogt (M) vs. Rfuedisilt (Wisc.); MacDonald (M) vs. Griffith (OSU). DOUBLES: Dubie-Wiley (M) vs. Buckman - Tomlinson (Pur.); Ful- ton-Vogt (M) vs. Mikkelson-Olson (Minn.); Tenney - MacDonald (M) vs. Pease-Ruedisili (Wisc.). Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE player. He will team with Fulton in the number two doubles besides playing in singles. The rest of the lineup will re- main the same with John Wiley at number two singles, Jim Ten- ney at number three, and Bruce MacDonald at number six. All three received top-seeded recogni- tion for their Big Ten undefeated play this season. Coach Murphy is keeping his doubles lineup the same with Dubie and Wiley at number one to go along with the seeded num- ber three combination of Tenney and MacDonald. Murphy, along with the other coaches, is hoping for a break in the weather today and tomorrow, as neither his team nor any of the others like to play indoors. The weather seems to be a deciding factor to the meet winner at the present time. IE I TEACHER AND PUPIL-Michigan number one man Gerry Dubie receives valuable advice from his Hamtramck High School Coach, Mrs. Jean Hoxie. The personable Mrs. Hoxie has developed many fine players in her career besides him. Floxie Develops, Tennis Champs) i 1 By FRED STEINHARDT "My players are taught to win- fairly." Gazing thoughtfully out over the Detroit River from her apart- ment, Mrs. Jean Hoxie formed these words slowly. For 34 years her entire life has revolved around them. As tennis coach of Hamtramck, Michigan High School, she has been recognized all over the world. She has conducted clinics in such far off places as Istanbul and- Johannesburg. More recently, she was welcomed to Russia as Premier Nikita Khrushchev's house guest. Coach of the Year She has been, chosen as Out- standing Coach of the Year in the United States. She was the first woman in the Michigan Sports Hall of Fame. She is the only woman on the seven member Pres- ident's Council on Youth Fitness. But the Hoxie story does not end with a long list of awards. It only begins. It is difficult to comprehend the impact Mrs. Hoxie has made on Hamtramck since she arrived there in 1926 after graduating from Columbia. Hamtramck is a separate city, located entirely within the limits of Detroit in a heavily industrial- ized area. Here is where she de- veloped the winners of 187 United States Championships and scores of topflight players. "The Others Can Play Tennis' Mrs. Hoxie does not stop at pro- ducing champions. "I may have one champion out of 100 but the other 99 can play tennis, and more important, have been exposed to breeding and poise." It is this pro-' gram, combined with her many champions, that distinguishes her from almost all other tennis coaches. She developes a rare personal bond with her students. Her eight and nine year olds, many of them children of factory workers and immigrants are taught above all to have'pride in themselves. "You can only wear one pair of trousers at a time and eat three meals a day. But you can't buy breeding or poise." Before they learn ten- nis; her players are taught to al- ways be polite, neatly dressed, spotlessly clean and honest with themselves and their opponents. Mrs. Hoxie watches her younger players with an eagle eye looking' for potential champions. Then the formula is instruction and lots of practice. A typical day's assign- ment may be 150 serves, 100 fore- hands and 50 lobs against a wall. Hamtramck graduates always seem to display the steadiness and poise that only endless hours of prac- tice and vast tournament experi- ence can develop. About ten years ago, Mrs. Hoxie spotted a wiry young man as he beat the favorites in a school yo-yo contest. She was impressed by the boy's competitive spirit and drew him aside to tell him that "I'll make you a champion." Today, Gerry Dubie is number one man on the Michigan tennis team. Hamtramck Alums Star Besides Dubie, George Korol, Al Hetzeck and Dick Potter have come to Michigan from Mrs. Hoxie. Potter captained the 1957 team which won the Big Ten and NCAA Titles. Bill Petrick and Jerry Parchute of Indiana, Fred Kovaleski of Wil- liam and Mary, Gene Russell of Western Michigan and Ken Ang- yell of Notre Dame are former Hamtramck players who went on to distinguish themselves in col- lege tennis. Last fall Ray Senkowski, who could turn out to be the best play- er Mrs. Hoxie has produced, en- rolled at Michigan and will be eligible for varsity competition as a sophomore in 1961. Senkowski has won the National Scholastic Singles Title and was on the Junior Davis Cup team. He teamed with Dubie in high school to win the National Scholastic Doubles Title. Was Mrs. Hoxie impressed by Russian tennis on her recent trip? "They are aggressive and have good services. They have excellent equipment and they are very neat and polite. They want to enter Davis Cup play, but they need practice and more topflight com- petition." At her invitation, several Russian junior players will visit Hamtramck this summer. U.S. vs. Russians? How would they stack up against her players? "Two or three Ham- tramck High School players could beat all of the boys I saw," she -said, with but the slightest trace of a grin. "Of course I only saw a few of their top players." During the summer, Mrs. Hoxie operates her "Tennis House," a tennis camp for promising players, located in an impressive colonial mansion, in front of her apart- ment. A thin line runs through all of this; her trips, her champions, her tennis program, the recogni- tion she has received- "My players are taught to win- fairly." 11 LE W L Pct. Chicago ........16 10 .615 Baltimore.......16 11 .593 New York ......13 10 .565 Cleveland ......14 1 .560 Boston........10 12 .455 Detroit .........10 13 .435 Washington ....10 15 .400 Kansas City ....10 17 .370 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Boston at Chicago (rain) Baltimore 2, Kansas City 0 (5) only games scheduled TONIGHT'S GAMES Baltimore at Detroit New York at Chicago Boston at Cleveland Washington at Kansas City NATIONAL LEAGUE GB i2 12 1 4 41 5A 6 1 See The Dinah Shore Chery Show in color Sundape, NBCTV-*h. Pat Boonm Chevy Showroom wukly, BC-T V professionat drivers got 27.03 mpg in the Mobilgas Economy Run W L Pct. GB Pittsburgh...?1 10 .677 San Francisco ..20 10 .667 1/ Cincinnati .....17 14 .548 4 Milwaukee .....13 11 .542 4/ Los Angeles ....13 18 .419 8 Chicago ..s.....10 15 .400 8 St. Louis.......1 18 .379 9 Philadelphia .. .11 20 .355 10 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Pittsburgh 8, St. Louis 3 Chicago 4, Philadelphia 2 Cincinnati 5, Los Angeles 4 San Francisco at Milwaukee (rain) TONIGHT'S GAMES San Francisco at Pittsburgh Chicago at Milwaukee Los Angeles at Philadelphia Cincinnati at St. Louis U COLLEGE MEN: EARN $2,000 THIS SUMMER Largest company of its kind in the country has several interesting summer job opportunities for personable college men in Detroit and Mich- igan resort areas. No experience necessary, but you must be neat appearing, and enjoy meet- ing people. No car necessary. PARTICIPATION IN OUR SUMMER EARNING PROGRAM WILL ALSO ENTITLE YOU TO COMPETE FOR THE FOLLOWING AWARDS: 1. $2,000 cash scholarship to school of your choice 2. Several $1,000 cash scholarships 3. 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