THE MICHIGAN DAILY rAGE THIRTEEN t + w , ,. +4 *1'."rr i Sports -f- A-~ BROWN SEETS ALL - EASTERN TEAM Writer Excludes Southern Schools This Year By Norman E. BrownI The selection of an All-eastern' eleven this year presents a greater problem than ever before for several1 'reasons. I..".. - "' uSome of them are:j The inability to compare logic- rJ .ally and concretely the strength of f4he several outstanding teams of that section. Lafayette, West Vir- ginia, Pennsylvania, Penn State, Columbia, Dartmouth, Yale, Rtut- eis y a u e -l e e s n ntheir various orbits. But because of the divergence in their sched-1 ~iles there is no basis of comparison . when individuals are considered.) Great scoring records alone meanj something but not all. The quantity of good but not great t ackfield men. _________ The prevalence of good linemen IIS TA h have departed from my previous, custom this year and have (oflined I mss Craig, Pennsylvania; BJorl all-eastern to the eastern college; man, Dartmouth. _alone. In past seasons I have includ-I Tackles: Starobin, Syracuse; Beat ed the soutnhern colleges in the Bayne! tie, Princeton. category. Guards: Diehl, Dartmouth; Far a te South should haeitCW~n s:.ee<'onl team---the mielber; o Center: Lovejoy, Yale. that eleven to be ive'igied Individ- Quarter: Darling, Boston C. wally In thue final sellectin ofthe Halfbacks:. Pond, Yale; Koppisc] S "il-Amoeau Sqtuad.Couba - T'he end scicction3 were eailyComia r ode' Fullback: Hazel, Rutgers. At the guard positions Penn State SECOND TEAMH a~gan l~esout ue o te po~i'til Ends: stout, Princeton; Bingha'i corrbination D~ieh-l and Farwickt present. These two men are the out-1 standing guards of the year in the Tac -Hlleran, Dartmouth east by clear margins. , Pernb Stare. Lvejoy of Yalle ousts Garhisch at j Guart:. . 1'cth Pnnsylvania ciiedeptthcrsiggame the pwrh e~i~er espie te crshig -House, Penn State. SArmy veteran plays. This choice is ii u- de' harder 'ov Carbisch's great _Center: Garbach, Army. hooting which beat the Navy.I Quarter: Di iore, Pincetwn. In view of thle fact that Dinsmore; Halfbacks' Chicknoski, Lafayette did not carry the quarterback burden Benkert, Rutgers. at Princeton most of the time hisi Fullback: McBride, Syracuse. selection for the secondl team at thati _________________ post may seem odd. He did show , h,1,owever, that he is one of the best "quarters in the east. . ?Pond Invaluable Member. 1 As for the halfbacks. Benkert of Runtgers miished the year as the l greatest point scorer in the east. 1. cannot place him above either Pond of Yale, or Koappiseli of Columbia, ----- however. Pond is the greatest "miud horse" in football today.!lie handles a ball cleanly, running Last andl cuteTh ,- Cauldr'oni footed on any kind of ground, and II. S.plays heads-up ball under, the most j hefrtheee atrrfifirst o; a fnal eleven at er nd!lokoarth iterrifricuer illtliltIIItbafllttleisotwastfinalltrecognizedtlaslyear and look ver the situatin. Mr. Shuter_, small is the difference in strength. linished behind Minnesota in the Big hingntigdfnieyi-ida Ihonorable M1ention. jTen championship. Unless Wein-,hvn ohn eiieyi ida i t Ens-tffrrgfBrw,'usyo is rebuilt within the month the {the time, went. C hristm as G i sW Dartmouth, will be practically forced to give Threut Dartmouth, Wagner of Columbia,y up its season. An outdoor rink is un- h"Oe rslsweete n "Come- ynae Sheldon of Brown, Luman of Yale, satisfactory at best as the games back"m Operas"comsie OnrDducbynme.old Be Selce No (Berry of Lafayette, Kneen of Cornell. must be played in the afternoon andj which established the Mimes presen- fO u Beece No the snow makes it difficult to keep tations as the outtanding college - Our Holiday Selections XW ere Never f . 'teice in condition. shows in the country. Item, one fully t"-equipped theatre boasting all the - rik 'h e latest staging devices and space to Mo e omnpee- b. " uilr aUninalrsu imAt tie rehearse all productions and buildLe Fil.M buit fr anoina su. A tmeset S-- llYour C rismaisN ees wegaean prcieweentiand paint the scenery for them. Itm1U-,~ NL being held students might be allowed one organization which works most'= to us;e the ice on presentation of sea- of the year toward the coming show 'sonl ticets. The money made by this and which systematically trains men means would pay for the equipment t iltepstosvctdb rd n ih aecr ftehce Schlanderer. Seyfried jadmgttk caeoth hokyuation. - tasexpenses. Such a rink migt' Since 1 the growh of te Opera = Jewelers 304 South Main well lbe built on Ferry feld. Michi- has been comet-like. It has invaded :W gan is perfectly adapted to winter the east and left them crying for- come from northern towns and th'Ivitein a omparativeltote The it - '. Nmate of Ann Arbor p.-'~e ie har a ul nte't 1 or a larme pa "t of the winter. At: of thce old Union dance hail, and is { any ate, sameflimo, mut hbe done in now usedl as the heduarters for, SOrder to save hokey as a sort at each of the annual producetions. The, Mh h1 ianzt. general quality of the shows has in''-' --___._ _--_-- .--creased in excellence and as it has gone so has the elaborateness of the: ik irco Opera. Each year has seen a show The DllG~tt)Iwithl much originality, irresistable, f(Continucd ircirn Pale Ten) 1.ace and remarkable smoothness and Pzolish. It is safe to say that this is amateurs, for before this he had beendualoteirytoheeotso connected with Fred Stone's famous c.Mrie htr e 1, M r im r h te . ...: .r: t ... .: I" t {.,:v :.,ff - *r "<7 . .7 -rT , . ot e; 1 01 of Y > fliA74x tern,,' and bci'ore' that hie had man aged hde tour., of such celebrities as 'lrs. Pat Campbell and C'hariotte Walker. The show was the best amateur l. r(duction that Bell'(1 had ever seen nrd he immediately became interest- s rd in this Ir. Shuter. If the wvar ,ginlcd before the next Michigan- Union i~~wawa resented lwould lhe come to Ann Arbor andl (irect the show, he as-e'd. Where was Ann Arbor n~td wha t was the Michigcn n Jic !opera? queried Mr. 'hut er. When it -.as tiade plain tr 1'Dianl iu ' what and where the Oner-i w M 1r. Shiuter ihowetll(slig-titeres~''Ct. lut at thiat Hr ethe v.Ur shiowe,'d 1ini) inut ion to {end andl no d in ite arrangemxents were m' [d e. Peace reigned onice more in thae late fall of 1918 and 'Mr. Shut er hard re- turnied to his home in Now York , when one mHorning there came a letter from the University of ~ici Mih-gan. Who could write him from there, he wondered, dndl opened the letter. It was from Curtis Bell and reminded of his conversation r'cgarding the j Aichigan Opera. Would he come out. to Ann Ai bor, all exp' uses paid, and His ceaseless efforts backed by a+ vrast store of actual expnerience and a keenu sense of what is good theatre and what is not have put the Opera organization where it is today. He{ pcssesises an uncanny sense of propor-1I ticn in musical comedy. For the first I few months of each year he is faced' with a past amount of material of, every sort. Musical, comical, scenic, and human. Out of this mass hie as- sembles a nroduction 'that runs asl sm'noothily as the Follies in their sec- Hlow hie does it cannot be discos- e; ed. flis system cannot be analyzed for lie works silently, efficiently and i itlhout mnuchi ado about anything- except v hen ado is called for--then) it, is. forthcoming with dlispatch. H~e (oes not go out for 'publicity, fewv recogulze himi on thme campus, or real- ize what hie: does (luring the mionth If between Septemtber and opening of the Opera. All they -realize 'is that another; rem 'rkable Opera will rep- resent Michigan on the, road this year.I Buit the power behind this all that 1 they realize must be. but (10 not par- . ticiularly considler is Ermest Mbortimeru Sb ut r. armu& WATCH our window for the wvonderful display of f an cy b oxes and XMAS NOVELTIES. "FAMED Next to g~reade ThBeater' F ORF RVS 1 0 rr .. _ 'ckles-Kearney of Cornell, Wal- f of Syracuse, McGinley of Penn- vania, Surabian Of. Williams. Lads-McManus, Boston College., enteYr'--Affeld =of Cornell, Johnson Pitt, Gray of Penn State. t luarters-Dlooley of Dartmouth, , ! y k } ;f a { 6; yip {5 5 p ! 4 } 5 7 7 4 f. ,i Q 1 41 i F ia. ] 7q t j .. 1) v 17 0 11.1 #70 6 gMichigan with all her champion- !ships and athletic glory is one of the Smost backward schools athletically in its class. Football, basketball, base- Sball, and(1 track are given a-great deaf of attention b~y the authorities and thie student body but a number of other shorts are pitifully neglected mnd several more are entirely ignored. ;several of these sporty rate as, much attention as, any of the others. Listed among thke minor sport", i which are recognized by the athletic authorities are hockey, tennis, wrest- ' ing, golf, and cross country. The! tennis and golf teanms are strongly su'pported but the others are suffering from a lack of interest. Until that in- terest is forthcoming Michigan can knoit hope to take her stand with the, gri at athletic schlouls of the land. M cst of the Eastern schools have fencing, boxing, soccer, and a number tof' other sports recognized and every spurt which is recognized is given ggreat support. To be considered successful ath let- Vaaclly a school should have a major-I ¢ity of its student oody actively engag- cd in sports. The more of those sports which are recognized as Var- 'sity sports, the stronger and more successful the athletics at a school will be.. There is absolutely no valid reason why the majority of the menf :°tudents at the University of Michigan hould not be trying out for Varsity t iams. At any rate, there is no rea- son why. a man talented in any branch of sport should not be given . t cance to win his letter in that spr.But more sports cannot be addto the list of those recognized fby the athletic authorities until more interest is shown in the teams which SMIchigan now has. rWhile the campus works itself into :a frenzy over the question of "invita- ition fraternity parties" there are all Sof five sports at Michigan which go y I-gging for material. "He men" xshine their shoes while an insignifi- (;ant minority of the men on the cam- i u lend their efforts 'to maintaining i' iliigan's athletic supremacy. Less t San 50 men started training for lichigan's cross country squad this faill. The majority of the students on Ilie campus think that football, basket- ball, and baseball are the only sports Sworthy of their attention and support. i Mibizn's coss ceountry squad trying condhitionis. fle is also one of. Beardsdel of Bucknell. [ he most versatile lhacks in the game. I -alflacks-Slagle of Princeton,t Koppisch's kicking and his driving 'Newman of Carnegie Tech, Wilson of attack on offemis keep him on the Army, Tyron of. Colgate, N\ardacci ofi team. Chic knoshi of Lafayette helped West Virginia, Oberlander of Dart- make that teamn a great defensive asi mouth. wvell as a strong- offensive outfit. l1 -dlbacks--K.reuz of Pennsylvania, Weighed as teams, I believe that i Cebhart of Lafayette, [Iou ali of Wil- the second team named would give! ihams, Ekberg of West Virginia. and his coaching ability, is beyond fire which razed Weinbarg's (Coliiem, question. The squad which turned Hockey, one of the finest sports in the ,; t C rippen's Drug Stores 723 North University Ave. out for him last year' andl again this year p~rovided hiim with scarcely enough nmen to enter in the ineeNs. Michigan's hockey team is now without a homne as the result of the' icurriculum, deserves a regular place, at iNchigan just as much as do has- ketball and football. After a number of years as an "informal" team which proved to be one of the best sextettes -in the' middle-west, the hockey squad 219 South Main 21-7 :North Main Cl]risti'l'-as \-aca [ion Js Nearl'y 'Flerc B~efore you go hoine you a~re wan~tedi at Crippen's New Drug SMore, 723 North University Avenue, to look over our C",.ristras r Tr ] crciani. Something for everybody' at rea;son- al je )fCS Ior Chr. Ua A Kodak Or an Eastmass, Camaora Isan Ideal gift We can Itn his Detail, r Wm & CANDY an Ideal Christmas Gift Home made candies, too, fresh from our kitchen, and packed in very at- tractive boxes, is sure to please at Xmas time. Palace ofSieet a -- ,. -If TAk 41,~ I IP, 7 -, li * . " - -'F7 :,- - -, - ;6 KODAI~s CAMIERA SUPPLIES Your Shirts For Sale by Deserve the best laundering possible. We specialize 'in the j laundering of shirts-silk, broadcloth and flannel. We abso- lutely guarantee the color. HAND WORK MOE LAUNDRY LYNDON & COMtPANY 719 N. University Ave. film Developing I' +. .. i