THURISDAY, TTII: 15, 1940 THE MICIGAN DAILY PAGE 7 Wolverine Sextet Clashes With Huskies At Houghton' Today Hockey Squad Seeks To End LosingStreak Samuelson Shifted To First Line Position As Stodden1 Moves Back To DefenseI (Continued from Page 1) Canfield will make up Lowrey's sec- ond line. The Miners from the snow country will start the same line-up that saw action here last month. Maurice Villeneuve, Charley Baird, and "Moose" Mulliette will go into action on the first line. Of this trio, Vil- leneuve, who has earned the nick' name of "The Flying Frenchman" is by far the most dangerous. He com- bines fast skating with clever stick- handling, and his bruising body checks make him a tough man to get by on the defense. Mulliette is the other threat on the first line, and although not as effective as Villeneuve with the body checks, he is a fast skater and a good back-checker. Ernie Alvord and Arne Mars will be at the blue line for the Huskies, and although they are not so dan- gerous bodily, they are both good poke-checkers and are quite handy at breaking up pass plays. Bespec- tacled Kurt Gustafson will be in the nets for Tech, and in the goal- mouth he presents quite a formidable last line of defense. In the series here he held the Wolverines to a single goal in the first game, and blanked them in the second contest. Ken Doherty Lauds Track Squad For Its Excellent Demonstration After a coach watches his team roll him as a competitor, and all that re- up 79 points in a meet, you might mains is for Decker to continue as think he'd be sitting on top of the he has been in practice in order to world-but not a Michigan coach. allow him to become the best vaulter Ken Doherty's remark after watching Michigan has had. his first Wolverine varsity run away Johnny Kautz's display of strength with all but two first places was and "heart" in driving up into third merely, "They were all right, consid- at the end of the half-mile and Bill ering. . Ackerman's performance in the it was the middle distance men gruelling two-mile run showed that who were on the disappointing side they too will be ready to take their to their coach. To be sure, the half- share of the points when the time milers ran one-two-three, and the comes. milers ran one-three-four, but Mich- igan track isn't based on relative per- formances; it's figured against that To Be Site of the rest of the country. 1:58.5 and 4:21. isn't bad for the half and the Of All-Star Game mile, respectively, so you can expect to see something when Ken puts TAMPA, Fla., Feb. 14.-UP)-Tam- the stamp of approval on the efforts pa was chosen today as the site of of his men. the All-Star baseball game between Otherwise, Doherty had nothing two picked National and American but praise, with the high-jumping League teams for the benefit of the star Don Canham coming in for top Finnish Relief Fund, and Sunday, mention. CanhAm's success is a March 17, was selected as the date. tribute to the hard work he has put A group of the city's civic leaders, in developing his new straddle style including Mayor R. E. L. Chancey, jump, and that he could set such a met with columnist Joe Williams, great mark in his first competition of chairman of the sports committee of the season augurs nothing but the the relief fund, and enthusiastically greatest of success for the remaining guaranteed that both attendance and meets. receipts for the game would establish The hurdlerscame next on Doher- a new record for southern baseball. ty's hit parade, with Stan "call me So far as possible, the game will be Watson" Kelley and Jeff Hall rating a duplicate of the All-Star game high. Kelley competed and did very played regularly at mid-season. Com- much improved hurdling that drew missioner K. M. Landis will attend, Tlnh~rt~vt rm nt Tfb hfiri t1 t li n t c a e c t v r. Y k C ti c s r S k 1 { c 4 Michigan James Ross Stodden Goldsmith Samuelson Lovett - Pos. G D D C W W M. Tech Gustafson Mars Alvord Villeneuve Mulliette Baird uo ercys commenu.. L UktI. gs iA look as though Stan were finally coming into his own in the barrier events. Hall had never shown much of anything in the high hurdles, but in recent. weeks has been coming along at a fast pace. The form he displayed while taking fourth brought a glint into his coach's eyes, and that means something. His low-hurdling, al- ways good, left little to be desired. Last, but hardly least, came the sophomores. The way Charlie Deck- er handled himself in his first varsity meet put the stamp of approval on -1 Michigan alternates-Corson, Can- field, Heddle, Collins. { Tech,,. alternates-Meyers, Sihvon- en, Frederickson, Petajo, Karane, Johnson. . We carry a COMPLETE LINE of ARROW SHIRTS and TIES INEI The Foremost Clothiers in Washtenaw County DOWNTOWN - Next to the Wuerth Theatre We have those new SAMERICA FIRST" Wace 15 Jewels $24.75 Either LADIES' or GENTLEMEN'S Liberal Trade-in Allowance on your old watch, if you wish. J.t B. FIBLEBt Jeweler Since 1904.... Now at 308 South State ~ : - -- - - By MEL F Groans About Zones.,. Periodically, and sometimes often- er, there arises something that is sure to upset the equilibrium which bas- ketball so precariously enjoys. Ever since the late Dr. Nainsmith set up a pair of emasculated bushel baskets at either end of a YMCA gym for pleasure-seeking members, howling cassandras have predicted the death of basketball. They ordered a casket for the game when the 10-second rule was in- stalled. They rang the death knell when the center jump was eliminat- ed. The symphony began to play Beethoven's funeral march when the pick-off play was redefined. But somehow basketball continues to play to some 80,000,000 spectators a year, and it keeps most of them sat- isfied. Now there's another gripe- the zone defense. "Positively ruinous" say many coaches; "tsk, tsk," cluck some other clucks. The common cry now appears to be "stop the zone de- fense before it ruins basketball". Now what are these things that are so objectionable about a zone? In the first place it relegates the use of the offensive pick-off play to a min- or position.' In fact, the zone was given a healthy impetus in the East two years ago when the rule-makers decided that the offensive blocking should be looked upon a little more leniently, more as it was in the mid- west and west. So to counteract the block, coaches began to use zones. In a zone defense every man plays the ball. The intention is to shift from side to side with the ball--and since no guard watches any particu- lar forward the block play is almost useless. If this were all that the zone had then it wouldn't be cursed so much, but it also affects their offense. The primary rule of such a defense is to get back and form a defense. The men never follow up their shots but immedi- ately backtrack and set up their vigil. BEDFORD STIR Did you see these shirts in the March Esquire? Yes or No, the biggest thrill will come from seeing them here in person. They're handsome enough to give the new dusty tone corded stripe trend a real authority, and toilored sor prfecly that yu'll not be able to resist owning a few. Sanforized- Shrunk (fabric shrinkage less than 1%). Your choice ofcolr sanA nllar "va , 1:42.6 as the Wolverines rolled up a Injuries Alter Hedt Refuses 61-23 score. o ryeBeebe's best time so far this year Court Lim e-Uwas the 1:38.1 he turned i against p To Encounter the Eli natators in New Haven. At Ohio he did 1:38.5. George Ruehle May Start d Tea in cate But even the great need for good In Place Of Pink competition won't get Francis Heydt By DOUN WHRTCHAFTER George Ruehle, a junior reserve, yDNWRCA'?R--_ will replace Charlie Pink on the back Francis Heydt has a chance to line, if the latter's injured ankle has humble his former friends from Iowa riot healed sufficiently to permit him this Saturday when Dave Armbrus- o start against the last place Chi- ter brings his Hawkeye mermen tog the I-M pool to share the spotlight cago Maroons this Saturday night. in the Wolverines' 1940 competitive Pink worked out with the varsity debut, but the Michigan backstroker yesterday afternoon as it drilled who transfered from Iowa last year against the second team, which was just isn't that kind of guy. employing a zone defense, but he Austntthandheofrrgy. p ihnP o did not take part in the scrimmage And when the cartridge explodes SCOTCH SODA folowe an styedoutof llfor the 150-yard backstroke event that followed and stayed out of all the fans will see Bill Beebe and LIME RICKEY work that required a great deal of Dick Reidl churning the water forG moving about. Michigan, and Heydt, the swimmer GINGER ALE Most of the action that Ruehle who did 1:36.6 in the National AAU has seen has been at a forward post, Meet in Columbus last March and but in the system Coach Bennie who finished second in the Western At Your L( Oosterbaan is using this season it is Conference and National AAU's then very easy for a player to quickly year before, will be on the bench adapt himself to a new position. watching.-- A hard working player, George has Won't Swim Against Pal continually been improving since the The t Apa season got under way, and he has The tall bespectacled Wolverne advanced and polished his playing dorsal artist isn't scared and he's more than any other member of last not staying out of the meet becauseC eara n ce y e a r 's r e s e r v e s q u a d . A s i x - f o o t e r , h e o f o r d e r s f r o m M a t t M a n n o r C o a chwi l a d c n i e b e h i g t f h e A m r s r . T e y d o h l k e o sehm i n h r e, will add considerable height if he Armbruster. They'd both like to see breaks into the line-up, and it will him in there, but as Heydt puts it, aid him in setting up long passes "I just can't picture myself in com- which are essential in working the petition against a fellow like Al Arm- ballthrugha zne efese uchastruster, the Hawkeye backstroker." ball through a zone defense such as "Wewere real buddies when I was Chicago employs.Q s o l Capt. Jim Rae who is also handi- at Iowa, in fact we used to live to- U% scour capped with an injured ankle took a gether" he explained, "and it cer- stiff workoutyesterday tainly doesn't seem right for me to sifwkotytedytry to beat Al now that I am on the T other side of the fence."o One thing certain i that Heydt could use the competition Saturday. CORNER Aside from swimming along with iOPCOAT" Beebe and Reidl, he hasn't been in a race since the AAU's last spring.CT" against a real backstroke star (ex- O C O T I NEBERG ~~~~Furthermore, Heydt 'won't come upagisarelbctoksarex So the two offensive maneuvers of eluding his two teammates) until most teams are blocked before they the Big Ten meet next month. start. Teams either use the fast And Armbruster has developed in- PAJAMAS - ROBES break, the pick-oft plays or both, And to a real star, let there be no ques- SWEATERS MACKI NA' tion about that.. When the Hawk- it's too tough to beat a zone defense eyes opened their season by whip- - ,vith those limited weapons. ping the Frosh, 50-34, the Iowa dor- Now, how can it be done? Well, sal agent, who incidently is no rela- R ITZ SH I RTS there are two ways. The first is to tion to his coach, turned in a 1:36 timing over the 150 yards. Even $1.59 shirts, now $1.29 get a long shot artist who can hit considering the flying start, this was with consistency. Adnitted that exceptional. $2.00 shirts; now $1 .59 that's a tough order it's the best way Armbruster Is Improving to whip a zone. It's the best way In the Illinois meet, which Iowa because to stop the long shots, the won 64-20, Armbruster won the event defense has to come out. And that in 1:37.7 while 1:38.1 was his timing strikes at the very heart of the zone as the Hawkeyes trimmed Minnesota otandry's hpltess. Thrend iste 56-28. This shows a tremendous im- tm and it's helpless. T-eff s the provementa over the Iowa lad's last DOWNTOWN t year's form. In Iowa City last Feb- The second way is one which ruary, Beebe licked him easily in is pretty much neglected in these ......._......._-- days of high scoring-fast and clever ball handling. If you can get the defense jumping from side to side then once more you've got them spread out. And then they're licked. There is, of course, a third way to whip the defense and that's to get a III lead and then stall. The defense has ou are corcal4 t/ to come out and get you-and once they come out they've no longer a zone defense. One of the big advantages ofI IL r/da j the defense is its offensive t0 a ten d a strength. It presents the opper- tunity for the fast break because the center man in the front line of defense is expected to break down the court, either to inter- cept a pass himself or whenever he thinks his teammates are about to intercept. That's one reason why Think Luisetti of Stanford looked so much like a basket hanger-he was always breaking down the court. But now the coaches are squawkt- "V CI, f 2 ing about the zone. It's like want- SWeet iOntl jrej 4 W ( ing to break the Yankees-because it takes too much trouble to beat them. There are ways to whip the defense. All the coaches have to do is employ the means at their dis- posal. I P ES . e (fe / /-1"4 romflire Come, and cl ut odrie a 27,ry~, itc 16 ia 9 O0 RAINBOW ROOI /r.ci gm ti o into the water Saturday night. "Why, it would be like trying to slap your best friend down." COLLEGE BASKETBALL Princeton 44, Harvard 24 Mount Union 49, Kent State 38 Cornell 57, Yale 41 Inct ... Since 1878 SASPARI LLA PIX UP SOFT DRINKS (all flavors) ucal Dealer 1- - . yY - WS V(: First Ncationol Building 'wiled1 Part4y 'IL ARROW'S SEMESTER SHIRT BEDFORD STRIPESUJj (Featured in the March Esquire) H ERE'S a shirt so far ahead in smart style that even a semester's wear won't date it. Thin, well-spaced corded stripes on soft-hued color grounds in blue, tan, and green distinguish Bedford Stripes as the find for 1940. As with all Ar. rows, they're Sanfor- ized-Shrunk (fabric shrinkage less than 1%). Break out some fold- ing money and buy an assortment of these fine shirts to- day before they're all gone. $2.25 each. jeri Raal i i aye Alice -1:-00 m1 I t