'TTC lHE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1923 ..--.. \ ,: r... . ...... r"" 'uiitL iiiY+' ,,,, i. , .. _ ._ ,I S"TI IKS S Ae STRUGGLE WITH HAWKEYE hore Teamn Displays Best Playing refused to quit. Van Dervoort con- of Season in Downing tinued playing until after being in- 4wao jured the second time he had to be carried from the gridiron. VANDERVOORT AND GRUBE Slaughter and Steele were both BOTIH INJUREI1 iN FRACAS going strong throughout the game, Slaughter turning the tide of battle Returning from their victorious trip in the final quarter when things to Iowa, ' Michigan's Varsity first looked quite black for the Wolverines. string men were given a rest yester- This came when the Hawkeyes started day afternoon before starting in on in- down the field and advanced by means tensive preparation for the coming of line plunges and passes to about game with the Marines next. Saturday. the 25 yard line of the Wolverines. Such was not the case with the sub- Here Butch threw the proverbial stitutes however as they were given a wrench into the machinery when he hard scr mnage against Coach Math- intercepted one of Fisher's passes. ers, yearling maggregation. The second Kipke then punted out of danger. triyernpregto chforthe The field generalship of Uteritz was string men proved too much for the of its usual high calibre, the light longend of the score.n n I quarter being master of the situation The Varsity backfield comprised of at all times. His uncanny ability to Parker at quarter, Vick at full, and tcll what play will work best was well Rockwell and Baker on the halves demonstrated in the opening period wa too fast a combination and with when he signaled a fair catch on the Neisch and Witherspoon on the ends Iowa 39 yard line in order that Kipke the aerial attack was of such a cali might have a free chance to drop kick. bre that the yearlings could not cope! And Kike did drop kick for three with it., jppoints. The kicking of the Wolverine On the line the Varsity was com- leader was of old time form, his plac- posed of Brown at center, Hawkins ing of punts being of the highest qual- and White at guards, and Kunow and ity. Time after time the punts went and hit atguadsaii Kuow nd ut f bund inidethe Iowa 15 yard babcock taking care of the tackles. out of bounds isidelthe w yrd, .The line alsoshowedupwell, the line. Steger did his share of the work, yearlings with their strongest line-up I his best dispay being on defense when he consistently broke up Iowa passes in the fray being unable to make buts little headway against the regulars. when the Iowans were proving them- Tars.feselves dangerous. His work on inter- Tcap Satfsfed. . ference also was good. The Wolverines are happy over their r eam Weakened victory over the Hawkeyes and not-! Micigan hopes received a setback withstanding the injuries which were rmithegamhowerinenasb receive .in, the,game believe that they from the game howeverin the injuries I oVnDervoort and Grube. Both men stand an excellent chance of repeating a in the hospital with injured legs their performape of last year, of'1r ntehsialwt nue es thei pti f~lnaCe ast ear ofand neither one will stand any chance going through the season without a de-s feat. Although disappointed that Iowa of getting into the Marine fracas. should mar the. Michigan record of Muirhead is also on the list of inca- whitewashes which had been hung up pacitated men and may not start during the previous games they are, against the Leathernecks. It is prob- tisfiedtohaebeatnthh able that Kunow and Babcock, the rogh-og Ioa teatter of whom showed to good ad- Tgh-going Iowa coteam. proved a hard vantage after he replaced Vandy in contestfrotebegnning for thethe Iowa game, will take care of the Man contsfo te bteinnngsforte tackles this week. Grube may be out wellthey can b work under fire. The in suit this week but will not be in entir'team worked best when the shape to start against the Marines. Iowans were close to the goal line and Grube put a nice game against the whenever the Hawkeyes became dan- IIawkeyes and his absence would be gerous that was when the Varsity greatly felt should anything happen to went harded. When Iowa did score it "Red" Miller. was through a break, coining after a blocked drop kick. The Hawkeyes in I tramural tes the second period took the ball wel g into Wolverine territory and finally--- 'made first down on about the 15 yard Followers of tennis are assured that line. -Here the Varsity began to get the freshmen will have a strong crew in its best licks and for three downs Towa failed to gain an inch. On the next spring after witnessing O'Connell fourth down Fisher dropped back to and R. U. Martin fight for the champ- attempt a drop kick but Michigan ionshi of the campus in the singles broke through and blocked the kick last Saturday, in which the former only to see the Iowans recover the emerged the victor, 6-2, 6-3, 6-4. ball on the Michigan 12 yard line for The champion was never in danger first down again. With the same work, of being headed, and won all of the to repeat the Wolverines went to it' games in a impressive manner, using with a will and for three more downs a back hand stroke that spelled de- held the heavy Iowa line, the Hawk-I feat for Martin every time it came eye backfield losing three yards on the into action. Martin played a good three downs. On the fourth down i game and seemed to be waiting for the Fisher, this time 15 yards from the breaks. Those that came he took good line of scrimmage, was able to get his advantage of. kick away, the ball sailing between Both of these men are freshmen on' the posts for the first score on the the campus and come here with previ-' Varsity this season. . ous successes behind thehm, O'Con- Powerful in Pinches I nell being the present singles title Michigan's showing in the game was holder in the amateur 'ranks of Wis- little short of phenomenal. All'of the' consin, while Martin was the all- men were on their, toes every minute campus champion at Vanderbilt last of play, and but for a few unfortunate year. Both men will be eligible for breaks the score would have probably freshmen and are expected to giake been even larger. Four times the the team without much trouble as Wolverines broke through the Iowa they have already taken the measure line and blocked punts only to have some Iowa man fall on the ball. I Three times the Wolverine to break through was "Louie" Curran, who though sick before the opening of the gam, went in and played the best game of his career. Both he and "Dutch" Marion put up a nice game getting down under punts and getting their men consistently. Too much credit can not be given "Red" MViller for his part in bringing home a Michigan victory. "Red" prac- tically tore the Iowa line to shreds in. the opening period smashing the for- ward wall for substantial gains every time he took the bail. In fact through- out the game he was good for yardage; until exhaustion from crashing into the line forced the substitution of Grube. Blott, the Star Jack Blott proved the hero of the hour by his playing in the first period when because he was on the alert and ready to take advantage of a break he enabled Michigan to score . her lone touchdown. The Wolverine center showed how far he ranks above other Conference pivot men by this one play alone. There are few centers in the country, who after passing the ball from the line of scrimmage can be down the field ready to recover a kick.! The playing of the entire line' against the much heavier team is de- FRE S1MAN BASKETBALL PRACTICE ANNOUNCED Starting with last night when when the first practice session of candidates for the all-freshian basketball squad was held, prac- tices 'will be held on the first four nights of every week from 8:15 to 9:15 o'clock in Water- man gymnasium. All tryouts must furnish their own equip- { "r ' l i.~i~ lYOT. i ;Harriers ShowAeHCBARKER STARTS PoweIn ace RY tAIITU inrn rADD j i 11 ::. ,t I ment. t RAY L. FISHER,! ARTICLE 3UMER THREE Coach. j COACHING-PAST AND gobbled up after it is proven success- PRESENT I ful. There are probably out of the hundreds of coaches throughout the of Michigan's Varsitysquad.Theproblems of coaching today, so I country, twenty-five who are responsi- s these men the tournament far as I can see, have not changed ble' or the dashing, brilliant game of to light two possible comers very materially from those of the 1 today. They saw the possibilities of and Olian. They are not as early days of football although as the new plays, put these possibilities into I as the first two, however. game advances new features in tech- practice and soon they were added as nic and theory of play develop. regular features of the game. In the m The duties of as coach, while seem- age of specialization men have de- much delayd Pcu Cof bnady j ingly light except during the actual voted their whole lives to the game of Zeta Psi and Phi Crhi finally playing season, are contrarily heavy football and as in all fields of en- as winners of two of the fra- and to meet with successful results, a! deavor, the game has advanced. speedball leagues thus filling' coach must put in a full year of faith- The fundamental bucking and run- ks of the necessary 10 teams ful preparation and even then one ning game can not be varied to any final series for the title. They little event can throw an otherwise I great extent as can be the forward ke their official debut in the successful season into a failure. pass which revolves around the suc- ranks tomorrow against two Coaches were not known in the cess of getting a man in the open to opponents. early days of the game. A group of receive the ball. Football fundament- men would gather and form two teams als, since the last revision of import- ving is the speedball schedule! something after the fashion of the 'ance in the rules, the barring of the balance of the week for the school lot "one-o-cat" and would play I pushing and pulling tactics, have been 1 sectional groups: 3:15 the game with little regard to rules pretty much the same. Systems of today, team 3 vs. team 4, 4:15 or the finer points. blocking are the same from coast to team 6 vs. team 7; 3:15 However, as with every other part coast, tackles are m'ade primarily in tomorrow, team 1 vs. team 3, of the game, when it began to attract the same fashion, side stepping, open vs. team 10; 3:15 o'clock, spectators, the desire to win cropped field running, line play, etc. is taught y, team 2 vs. team 5, 4:15 up in the schools and consequently after the same general fashion but, team 6 vs. team 9; 3:15 the teacher or professor of football, cach coach has -an angle peculiar to team 7 vs. team 10. came into being and as the game his style of play in which he develops grew in interest, so did his position in- his men and it is his conception of lass teams playing speedball 'crease in responsibilities until today this play taught to his men, personnel. duled to meet as follows: 4:15 coaches are considered a prime re- being equal, that makes the winner or Wednesday, fresh engineers quisite for any team. loser. >r engineers. A coach's life has always been a Scouting has done much to revolu- ,r estrenuous one and in looking over the tionize the system of play. And in- 'successful coaches today, both in large cidentally scouting is one of the least gthe- fraternity speedball universities and small colleggs, one known practices. in the game today. winners who are playing for finds that by far the greatest percent There is an often misconstrued, opin- games have been scheduled have not been coaching over ten years. ion that a scout is a spy. That he is That fthe Michigan cross ,country I h win III IthILLnW team is one of the ,trongest hill and dale aggregations that Michigan ihas 4ONLY TWENTY MEN ANSWER ever had was proven Saturday when FIRST CALLS FOR the athletes partook in the annual I TRYOUTS Harpham Trophy run. In winning first honors. Larry Dav-' Wrestling, a sport which has for is, Steve's best bet established a new some time been actively recognized record for the course traveling thIe distance of five miles in the exception- by every other school in the Big Ten al time of 27 minutes 16 seconds. with the exception of Michigan, prom- Davis looms up as one of the brightest ises to emerge into the limelight this prospects for firt honors in the Con.. year. Coach Barker, national inter- ference run which is slated to take collegiate champion at Ames in 1920. place the latter part of the month. who has been procured to coach the The Conference run is one of the most team has already issued a call for can- hotly contested meets that occur in didates for the squad, weighing under cross country realms. 135 pounds, and with the close of the In winning second place Saturday, football season will settle down to the Captain Arndt won second honors in task of pi'eparing a team which will the , Harpham trophy tun for three he fit to enter inter-collegiate matches successive years. This is a feat that this winter. has never before been accomplished. A special room in Waterman gym- What makes Arndt's performances 'nasium has been reserved for the more striking, is the fact that firestgrapplers and a new mat will he laid honorsin the meet have never gone ttoday. to any one athlete more than once. Practice sessions for the lighter Chue w the race in 1921, Isbll as weights will be held regularly from year and Davis this year. 7:30 to 9:30 Tuesday and Thursday With the exception of Roy Calahan night. Up to the present time only the squad is in the best of condition. 25 men have appeared in apswer to Calahan, who ran some fast trials I the call for tryouts, none of whom ap- during the first part of the season pear to have had good coaching pre- may be lost to the squad for the rest viously. of the season due to a minor operation which he will ha've to undergo the shoot and found the balls frozen. He latter part of the week. Steve has spotted them and missed, much to the counted on great results from this amusement of the gallery. man and his loss will be felt. Coach Farrell now has his squad Claiimimng that schools and colleges at work in preparation for the trian- over the country are doing all 'possi- gular meet with Illinois and Ohio ble to make football a clean and re- state which takes place on Ferry spected sport Coach Alonzo Stagg, Field Saturday morning. The meet 62-year-old director of athletics at the will no doubt be close but the Wolver- University of Chicago, in a letter to ines seem to be the favorites. thousands of "friends of college foot- ball" this week denounces profession- Sport Snap Shots al football as a menacing advance to- f l , . i Among league 'r the title i : > as 1ouws: 3: 15, today, Bet Theta Pi vs. Phi Kpppa Sigma; 4:15 o'clock, Phi Gamma Delta vs. Alpha Sigma Phi; 3:15 o'clock, toilmorrow, Phi Chi vs. Phi Sigma Delta; 5 o'clock, Alpha Rho !Chi vs. Zeta Psi. Tryouts for the '27E speedball team report at 4 o'clock this afternoon at Ferry field toGeorge Lamb, chairmanI of the class, athletic committee. Fraternity athletic managers should take careful notice of the rulings on their runners in the coming cross, country meet. If any man is unable to appear for the daily practice ses-1 sions, which are being held under thel supervision of Coach Sullivan, Intra- mural' trainer, he may train himself if he informs the Intramural depart- ment of his intention of doing so. He will be given a test a week before the regular meet by the Intramural offici- als in order to ascertain his physical condition. If hbe passes the test, he will be allowed to compete Nov. 19. I GOULD TO ADDRESS JUNIOR This is a significant fact in that it sneaking into practice sessions, en- proves exclusively that truly success- deavoring to secure signals and codes ful coaches, year after year, are far I and watching the training of theI in the minority for a coach must be; teais. This is far from the truth. A1 successful in victories to continue in I scout today never sees an opponents I the game for any length of time. team in action, only at regular public I can say truthfully that in no other; games, never, knowingly secures an profession is a man forced to face the opponents signals nor takes an unfair obstacles that confront him as a coach. advantage. This department of coach- How long would men in other pro- ing is ,horoughly understood among fessions last if the results of their the coaches themselkes and they ex- work, exemplified by other men, were tend complimentary tickets to a visit- placed in competition with the others ! ing scout and show him all possible in their profession? There can be but courtesies that he may secure all of one winner in a group and many would' the datapossible. fall by the wayside. More and more each year, coaches And then in addition to turning out # and teachers of competitive games and winners, the coach must stand up fav- physical edlucation are receiving added orably in public opinion which often 'respoiisibilities and coaching has ad- times is fickle. le must gain and hold vanced from a practically unknown the favorable opinion of the public, field into one of the foremost and lead- the alumni and his student body who I ing professions. are loud in their praise of winners and __ equally so in their criticism of the"[{ loser. A coach's life is, and has al- I(GYMNASTS NOTICE. wa'ys been a strenuous one.'- A rI..'All wards tearing 'uown the moral spirit - Iof the game which colleges are trying During the fourteenth inning of the ( to build up. world's 18-2 title billiard tourney be- tween Welker Cockran and Erich Tommy Gibbons, the pugilist who Hagenlacher, Thursday, in New York. stayed ten rounds with Jack'Dempsey Cockran had to be persuaded to con- I last summer, is seeking a match ivith tinue one of his runs during the game. the winner of the Jack Renault-Floyd He Tad the balls fairly wide at the Johnson fight, according to Eddie head of the table and tried a wide Kane, manager of the St. Paul fighter. cushion draw, drivingthe red all to the foot of the table. Cockra n dropped his cne just as the ball !miss-Mason, Mich., Nov. 5.-Mason H1gh ed the white ball. He sat down ani defeated St. Johns High, 3 to 0, Sat- had to be coaxed back to shoot when urday. the referee ruled that the red ball, in returning to the head of the table, Harbor Springs, Mich., Nov. 5.-East struck the two other' balls together. Jordan defeated Harbor Springs Sat- Once convinced, Cockran got up to urday, 7 to 6. II .""._.....a ..... .............. ...... *i A coach s success varies with his or- iginality and strategy in workjng out, means of offense and defense and his JLESEARCII CLUB TONIGIT ability to transmit his knowledge to the personnel which is given him to L. M. Gould, of the geology depart- develop. Thirty years ago, when the ment, will be the principal speaker game was practically in its infancy, it! at the regular meeting of the Junior had not naturally been played over' Research club to be held' at 8 o'clock a long enough period of time to de- tonight in room G 231, Natural Sci- velop the fundamentals and technic to ence building. Mr. Gould's topic will the stage that one finds it today. be "Geologic Reconnaissance in the Coaches, and there were few of them in La Sal Mountains." H. F. Fruth, of those days, had not given the game the physics department will also be sufficient consideration 'to even dream' on the program speaking on "Residual of its full possibilities and the game Ionization." Those interested are in- of today is a result of many years of vited to attend the meeting. careful planning by some or the great- est authorities in the country.{ Golfers in the United States number Each year sees a nei angle of the 7,500,000. present open game which is eagerly All men wll ohavenak hd experi- ence or are interested in gymnas- tic work are requested to meet with Dr. May, Director of'Water- man gymnasium at 4 o'clock, to- morrow afternoon, when plans for the gym team will be discussed. BASKETBALL MANAGER TRYOUTS ARE NEEDED More tryouts for assistant basketball manager are needed. All men who have been on the campus one year are eligible. Men caring to try out are ask- ed to report at the gymnasium at 7:30 o'clock any night. SIi -I' I 'I is 1* t/ j Jr r. '1 , -: :. z :. fM i 4 i s y tr III1(I" I ' : it :L "1 Suits by Langrock is Supreme in q uality'and style, Langrock designs cater to the college man. We have these fine fabrics at exceptional values.