PA OX SEVEN* WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY if f 'M'Looks for New * * * Successor to Ernie McCoy Will Be Named by Crisler nS Hoop Coach Departing Court Mentor Ends Long Association I1 go- 1 L. - FABRIC SHOES Completely Genuine By BOB MARGOLIN The big question on the Michi- gan sports scene is who will re- Place Ernie McCoy as head coach of the Wolverine basketball team. McCoy resigned two weeks ago to accept a position at Penn State as athletic director and head of the physical education department there. * * * MICHIGAN'S athletic director H. 0. (Fritz) Crisler, who returns today from a football clinic at Boulder Springs, Col., is expected to name McCoy's successor in the near future, possibly this week. His desk is cluttered with ap- plications from several coaches, among them Clair Bee, former coach of the scandal-wrecked Long Island University quintet. Bee, whose integrity has never been questioned, is attempting to get back into the game. According to publicity man Les Etter, however, first crack at the - job will go to present members of the Michigan athletic staff. Next in line for the job will be any graduates of Michigan who are now in the coaching profession. This means that men like Frank Cappon, successful Princeton coach, could have the job for the asking. * * * IF NO ONE from either of those groups is appointed, then Crisler will have to resort to the applica- tions on his desk or else do a little recruiting before he makes his final decision. McCoy also served as assistant athletic director and head foot- ball scout, but his court succes- sor will devote full time to the handling of basketball affairs. Since the position of assistant athletic director was created back in 1947 when Crisler was burdened with the dual jobs of head football coach and chief athletic adminis- trator, there is a possibility that Crisler may choose to abolish that -office, at least for the time being. It may also be a long time, be- fore Crisler picks another football scout to replace McCoy, who for several years has been considered one of the finest in the Big Ten. ' Ernie McCoy, who leaves Michi- gan to take over as head man in the Penn State athletic system August 1, is ending many years of association with the University. As an undergraduate he won the coveted "M" in both basket- ball and baseball. In his sopho- more year he played on a diamond squad that won undisputed cham- pionship of the Big Ten and two years later he coptained a team that tied with Wisconsin for league honors. * * * AFTER RECEIVING his degree from Michigan, McCoy earned a Master's in physical education at ERNIE McCOY . . . farewell to Michigan ATHLETICS FOR ALL: Complete IM Sports Program Set Columbia University. He later be- came athletic director and head coach at State Teachers' College in Montclair, N.J. and then took the same position at Montclair High School. In 1940 McCoy returned to his Alma Mater, serving as as- sistant on the coaching staff. World War Two brought this visit to a sudden halt, however, and McCoy soon found himself serving in the Navy as an ath- letic officer. Upon his return to Ann Arbor, McCoy was "kicked upstairs." He was named assistant athletic dir- ector to H. 0. (Fritz) Crisler, who was doubling as head football coach at the time. * *i * WHEN Ozzie Cowles left Michi- gan in 1948 to take charge of the Minnesota basketball coaching duties, McCoy was named to take over the Wolverine reigns. Despite the fact that he is a shrewd observer of individual athletic talent-he was one of the best football scouts in the Big Ten-McCoy did not have too much luck as a hardwood mentor. His first team captured third place in the Big Ten race, but since then the results have been less encouraging. His overall league record is 18 wins and 34 losses. Last season his young team, which occasionally showed flashes of brilliance, could only garner four wins in 14 starts. McCoy's successor as Michigan court mentor has not yet been named. + FADED BLUE * NAVY NATURAL * GOLD Sizes to 13 By IVAN KAYE A well rounded program of in- tramural sports is on tap for Michigan's summer students, ac- cording to Assistant I-M Sports Director Rod Grambeau. There will be both individual and team competition with the faculty and students appearing in the same leagues. An outstanding feature of this summer's individual tournaments will be the double elimination in place of the cus- tomary single elimination which is used during the regular school year. THE INDIVIDUAL competition GREENBERG GARDENS: Pirate Players Ask Removal Of Close Left BOSTON-(P)-The last place Pittsburgh Pirates decided to ask the club to remove "Greenberg Gardens"-the home-run hitting paradise at Forbes Field in Pitts- burgh. The* players requested Howie Pollet, their representative, to convey their wishes to general manager Branch Rickey when the Bucs return to Pittsburgh Friday. * . *s "WE'VE BEEN losing too many games when players on other teams dump fly balls into those bullpens," Pollet said as he dis- cussed "Greenberg Gardens" -- named after Hank Greenberg. "That fence is doing other teams in the league a. lot more good than it does the Pirates." The fence to which Pollet re- ferred was erected 30 feet in front of the Pirate scoreboard in left field back in 1947 when Greenberg came to the Pirates from the Detroit Tigers. Origin- ally the fence was eight feet high all along its length to left- center field but before the 1948 season it was increased to 16 feet. Without. the fence, the distance from home plate to left field is 365 feet. With it, a home run hitter only .has to smash the ball 335 feet. THIS YEAR Pirate sluggers have dropped 16 homers into the "Gardens" while their National League opponents have collected 21. (In Pittsburgh Rickey could not be reached for comment.) Field Target Meanwhile, the Pittsburgh Post- Gazette-which has kept statistics on the "Garden" homers-said the Pirates actually have hit more than their opponents. The Post- Gazette said the Bucs have smash- ed 231 "Garden" circuit clouts while the combined opposition garnered 225. A team spokesman said Ralph Kiner, the home run hitter of the Bucs, voted in favor of remov- ing the fencedespite the fact that 64 of the 246 homers he has hit at Forbes Field have been of the "Garden" variety. Varsity Courts *Open to Public This Summer The varsity tennis courts on Ferry Field will be open to the public during the summer session, outgoing assistant athletic director Ernie McCoy announced yester- day. An attendant will be on duty from 1 p.m. to 8 p.m. seven days a week. To defray the maintenance of the clay courts a charge per hour of play will be necehsary, he said. The fee is sixty cents per person for singles and forty, cents per person for doubles. The asphalt courts on Palmer and Ferry Field will be open to students at all times without charge. is slated to begin the week of July 7, and entries should be in by July 5. There will be tourna- ments in badminton, golf, hand- ball, horseshoes, paddleball and both singles and doubles tennis. Team competition will be of- fered in softball, basketball, and if entries are received, in volley- ball. As during the regular year, there will be a co-recreational program each Friday night ex- cept the Fourth of July. Both students and faculty are invited to these programs which last from 7:30 until 10 o'clock. With the summer promising to be a scorcher, I-M Director Earl Riskey has announced that the Intramural pool will be open to students Monday through Friday from 2 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. and Sat- urday mornings from 9:00 to 11:30. The faculty will use the pool Monday through Friday from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. *' * * LAST SUMMER'S badminton champion Frank Scott is back on Entries for summer session IM softball are now being ac- cepted. All interested individ- uals or team captains please phone 8109 before the June 28 deadline. --Don Robinson campus for the current session and appears ready to defend his title. Other trophy winners in last season's individual competition include: Bob Caton in golf, Sid Harmon in handball, Robert Revis in horseshoes, Barry Driggers in paddleball, Marty Dekker in singles tennis and Bill Wait and Tom Ungerleider in doubles play. Team champions last season were: Sigma Chi in softball and basketball and Fletcher Hall in volleyball. Softball contests will be held Tryout call! Future Grantland Rices can gain valuable experience in all phases of sports writing and edit- ing on the sports staff of The Michigan Daily. Men interested in taking ad- vantage of the opportunities of- fered on a small informal staff are urged to report to The Daily tryout meet tonight at 7:30 in the Student Publications Building on Maynard Street, one block west of State Street. Rolfe Moves Art Houtteman To Status of Relief Thrower at 6:30 p.m. on the I-M fields. Basketball games will be played in the gymnasium of the Intra- mural Building at 4:30 p.m. Proof of the high caliber of competition in these summer session sports is shown by the fact that last season Barry Driggers :captured the paddle- ball championship by besting Lowell Emerly, who was the all- campus title-holder during the regular year. Rounding out the very efficient Intramural summer sports staff behind Director Riskey and As- sistant Director Grambeau are: Newt Loken, Dennis Rigan, Don Robinson and Ed Olds. MAST' 619 East Liberty St. DETROIT-M)-Ex-soldier Art Houtteman's tale of heartbreak and hard luck picked up a new chapter yesterday when manager Red Rolfe demoted the Detroit Tiger righthander to the role of a relief pitcher. Art, fresh out of the army, had been expected to lead the Tigers in contention for a first division berth this season. BUT WITH the season nearly half gone the Tigers are buried in the American League cellar and Houtteman-first pitcher in the league to lose 10 games-is buried in the bullpen. Rolfe hopes both are tempor- ary situations. "What's wrong with Houtte- man?" is a question you hear in this. town almost as much as "What's wrong with the Tigers?" Art, stumbling along with a gen- erous 4.71 earned run average, has been driven off the pitching mound in the last nine games. He has won three games and lost 10. Houtteman, handsome,24-year- old youth from Detroit, grins at questioners. "Things will get bet- ter," he says. * * * ROLFE ANNOUNCED his deci- sion to put Art in the bullpen with these words: "The boy needs a rest. This is only temporary. May- be I can put him into a ball game when we're behind and if he can win it, maybe that will help." Coach Rick Ferrell, once a big league catching star, has an ex- planation for Art's pitching woes: "His control is a little off. He's not wild as far as walking men or throwing the ball away. But he can't put the ball just where he wants it. When he's pitching to a batter's weakness the ball wanders a little and the batter's got a hit." Some fans think Art's troubles are partly caused by preoccupa- tion with the sudden death of his only child in an auto accident this spring-but there is no evidence to prove or disprove such a con- tention. Art seems cheerful enough and laughs at those who would call him "Hard Luck" Houtteman. Some folks gave him that nick- name after the following occur- rences: 1-He won 2 and lost 16 games in 1948 despite some im- pressive pitching; 2-He was near- ly killed in auto accident in Lake- land, Fla., during the 1949 spring training; 3-His baby daughter's death; 4 - His performance on April 26 this year when he had a no-hitter with two outs in the ninth inning only to see Harry Simpson of Cleveland single into left field. In 1950, the season before he went into the army, Art won 19 games. Collegiate Cuts to please 7 BARBERS NO WAITING The Daseola Barbers Near Michigan Theater Campus Store Only i v vr. W' ;.y R EA i %a to 4"A 51% 'rr1 V \V }5P: Sly :!1 ,.k fi $:S9 F}: fl" SY: t . .l r0.. II 4?A 3vP M F^ F V; 5"r: :"Ji A A Oginal Washable Dependable I ; :<'a .t I' is . {' r .1; " I READ AND USE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS U - rj WELCOME SUMMER STUDENTS STUDENT SUPPLIES RENT a typewriter and keep up with your work Loose Leaf Notebooks Fountain Pens Mechanical Pencils Brief Cases Greeting Cards Webster-Chicago Tope & Wire Recorders * * 0 Clary Electric Adding Machines NEW PORTABLES Smith Corona Royal Remington I TEXTBOOKS and SUPPLIES For All The fine crisp and porous cotton cord is washable. anteed never to shrink or fade. . . guar- s in Haspel Cotton Cords Haspel's original contribution to summer living at its coolest, freshest and lightest . , . the ever-demanded cotton cords. Haspel cords are a "must" for truly comfortable hot weather wear. I Colors: Tan and Blue. JACKETS $16.75 SUITS $23.50 SUMMER STORE HOURS Monday through Friday. . . 9 to 5:30 Saturday ... 9 to 1 Portables E I III I