THE MICHIGAN DAII-Y TUESDAY, NOVEM'PEA 29, 19 TIAP MICT-TIflAN flAh V TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 29. itI |THREE MICHIGAN MENUNIVERSITY OFSOU AR GIVEN, POS|T BOW BEFOkE ARE GIVEN POSITIONY nm AL-CONERNCE FOOTBALL TEAM THERN CALIFORNIA ATTACK OF NOTRE GRIDDERS DAME ELEVEN, l|\(I|E( UDIEQ 'FRIEDMAN CLOSES FIRST SEASON OF 7-6 nrULfhIi L IIU Ll K) PRO FOOTBALL WITH CLEVELAND TEAM ONh MYTRCLELEVEN i 0 STEBAA , Al LBERT. A BAEI (CHOSEN BY SPORTS STAFF FOR TEAM N I) IU LLEIVE LEIIES) Fie Yars n I l1AndD Iale )lenA vill Be The " ecipients Of Awards k 'c*r yIir worl NEW MANAGER APPOINTED Fis members of the 1927 Varsity S crs cen1ry team will rceive fet- ters according to an announcement made by Coach Stephen J. Farrell, veteran Wolverine harrier mentor, following a meeting of the Athletic1 Benny Friedman, field gene-ral on'the direct ut ofFrdansw 1iichigan's 1926 grid team, clos('d11:s e;. first season of professional football Th is exhibiticn of Fried man's pro' - in Chicago Sunday with a demonst ra- ,5 br:in to m ind the Michi tion of the variety of forward pass Navy game of 1 . whcn the V - ilg that won him all-American han- ' ethis sunk he M iddies under a ors last year. The Cleveland ull!!dogs barage 01 la s, to win 4-. Ti a erial at ack disayed in tha ge who are coached by Friedman, de~ - :as Jprob ity the most spectacular feated the Chicago Cardinals, :32-7, ever witnesed on a colleN g mainly through their pilot's efforts. Out of 19 passes tossed by the r s na muer Wolverine quarterbackv, eihth me nctik jreiinwh were completed for a total gain f hi b ss s in the National Profession- 223 yards. Four of the live touch- a league ganies that charaer en downs that Cleveland scored iwera hiscollegit career. MANY STARS IN BIG TEN. 1111. Io Phy Is Lsuded But Fail To Cain Any Placemien ts On All-Slar 'eani By ,lcrbert E. Vedder,. Every year the experts, self appoint- ed and otherwise, deem it their duty to select numerous' "all" teams after the football season so as to honor the men they consider the best players of the year. Such has been the prac- tice of The Daily in regard to pick- ing a mythical all-Conference teami and we wish herewith to submit our selections for 1927. The blan e for the following selee- tions rest with the sports editor but he FIRST TEAM, j f Oosterbaan (Michigan) (C) .LE C Raskowaki (Ohio State) ; . T Hanson (Minnesota)........LG Rouse (Chicago)............. C Baer (Michigan)............RG Nelson (Iowa) ..............RT Fisher (Northwestern) ......RE ICrofoot (Wisconsin) ........ QB Gilbert (Michigan)....... LH Almquist (Minnesota).......RH Joesting (Minnesota) ......,..FB SECOND TEAM I Cameron, Wisconsin) ........LE C Nowack (Illinois) ..........LT | Crane (Illinois) ............LG Reitsch (Illinois) (C)....... Matthews (Indiana) ........RG Gary (Minnesota). .....RT Hayc raft (Minnesota)......RE IWilcox (Purdue)........... QB Timm (Illinois)............LIH Eby (Ohio State)..........RH Rich (Michigan))............FB THIRD T EA Grange (Illinois)...........LE Pommerening (Michigan) ...LT E Gibson (Minnesota)........G Randall (Indiana)............ C Palmeroli (Michigan).......RG Binish (Wisconsin)..........RT Spencer (Chicago).........RE Nydahl (Minnesota) (C) ....QB Gustafson (Northwestern) ..LI Welch (Purdue) ............ RH" Arnil (Iowa) ...............FB Honorable Mention. - Miller, Gabel,, Nyland (Michigan); Mc- C Kinnon, center,k(Minnesota); IKoransky, fullback (Purdue) ; } Mendenhall, Leyers, Libby, half- backs, (Chicago); Dart, guard, C Northwestern); Perkins, tackle, Mills, Humibert, backs, Deimling, Iend, (Illinois); Bennett, half- back, (Indiana); Rose, back, Wagner, tackle, (Wisconsin); Bell, end, Grim and Huston, backs (Ohio tate). has been ably and well assisted by the various nrembers of the sports staff and wishes to express his appre- ciation of their work and that of Phil Brooks, staff editor, who has also been a co-worker in attempting to forecast this fall's grid contests in "Doping The Dope." In making selections, team balance has been carefully considered and an effort made to give each school in the Big Ten a fair representation. We have been handicapped in this by a limited knowledge of several Con- ference aggregations, notably Iowa, Indiana, Purdue, and Northwestern, which we have not seen in action and on them we have been forced to rely solely on newspaper writeups and gos- ' ; I, 7 4 j ( ; i c E .association yesterday afternoon. l 1 l l 9 1 l N 1 1 I 1 1 lTm.lu The men receiving letter under the new ruling include Capt. Ran- dolph Monroe, Theodore Wuerfel,- William Carison, Beverly Herbert, ' and Charles Wells. None of these .. 9~<"men have ever received a cross coun try award, although Mot roe and Wu- erfel were awarded AMA's at th T ('lose o the 1926 season. Kennedy andI.lesson will receive min"o This is the largest number of let- ters ever granted in this sport in ai single season and was made possible by a new ruling passed at the meet- A crowd estimated at 113,000 persons, the largest on record in the history of football, jammed Soldiers' Field, ing of the Athletic association yes- Chicago, to see Notre Dame defeat Southern California, 7 to 6, in a bitter intersectional battle, with Flannagan, terday, whereby letters will be award. Our wonderful new tuxedo Notre Dame backfield star, and Morley Drury, great quarterback of the Trojans, vieing for ground-gaining honors. ed to the first five runners to finish=ib- The above photo shows Flannagan making a 10-yard gain in the first quarter. to a Conference dual meet victory, as t- well as any runners who finish- sip. NE ATTENDANCE RECORDS AND MANY among the first 15 in the Conference ular on the campus. Very Michigan Giveni Three Places. FEA+ 7TURE GRID A championship race which is held at= specially priced-- Michigan is given three positions UPSETS FEA TU E 1927 SEASON the close of the Big Ten season each on the first eleven as is Minnesota. year. Of the latter team we have nothing Now that the "all-American" all- nated include the following: Under the former ruling letters but the highest praise and deem it American experts are in their glory Again the attendance record was were awarded only to runners who man for man without parallel. The and the self-styled critics are reclin- captured first place ion a dual meet only regret is that it is scarcely ing upon their respective incumben- smashed-here and there and every- or placed among the first 15 finishin Orderedin adance ethical to pick the entire Gopher team. cics with their water-logged feet rest- where. Conservative estimates place in the annual championship run. This No other eleven is given more than ing upon the proverbial "hot stove," the total attendance at collegiate restriction usually limited the num- C one position while, Illinois, Conference grid fans are presented an infallible football parties somewhere in the her of letters in this sport to one or title holder, is left without a place. sign that the football season is just neighborhood of 25 and 30 millions two each season. This apparently is difficult of explan- about over. but of course no-single stadium was Captain-Monroe assuredhiumsnth-s h ation andl has caused more trouble Of course there still remains the p~acked to well over 85,000 three thmes his letter, regardless of the change- than any other factor in making selec- Tournament of Roses spectacle on in one season as was the new bowl in the ruling, by placing eleventh in iSlightly more Ivhen bOught from stock tions. New Year's Day at Pasadena; the spe- at Ann Arbor. the 1927 Conference championship Bob Zuppke's team showed perhaps cial memorial tribute to the deceased More important is the fact that which was held Nov. 19 over the Wol- the greatest amount of real team play venerated figure of Andy Smith, the with several minor exceptions the verine course. The other harriers seen in the middle west in years, and California-Penn contest; the Georgia various leaders of the several sections earned their awards in the dual meet in addition, were one of the smartest, Tech versus Georgia feature at At- in 1926 were convincingly toppled victory over the Purdue team in the shiftiest and trickiest of the 1927 lanta next week in which the Bulldogs from the pinnacle of success. first meet of the season. teams. The Ilhini have repeatedly are expected to vanquish the Golden In the East where unbeaten Lafa- Only one of the men receiving let- been proclaimed as the team without Tornado to earn the national "myth" yette stood last season, in 1927, be- ters this year will be lost by gradua- a star but they have a great bunch of championship. sides the four or five times defeated tion, as Wells is the single senior onF- players. But the balmy climes of the Pacific Lafayette eleven and a derelict rust the Wolverine team. - t- "11,CO J% I Tr/ OasterbaanisteBestEnd. 'and the Sunny South are not of the of "Iron Men" of Brown, there stand Paul Colwell was appointed mnana- r7enc Sd ince 16 p Capt. Bennie Oosterbaan, end non- sort the North is blessed with, and so the great Pittsburgh and Yale elevens, ger for next season, and Jerry Thay--- pareil and one of the greatest of all only a few of the rugged prep school neither with slate unchalked, but er, Don Reid, and E. B. Kinney were football players, is placed at left end. boys and the husky professionals will champions or co-champions. named as assistants. Besides his well known proclivity at be able to cavort upon the rapidly The grand Michigan and North- catching passes, the Wolverine lead- cooling gridiron. western teams of 1926 are replaced by Ken Rouse, Chicago captain, will er does almost everything football Just a few of the significant facts the no less grand Minnesota and Illi- play against Wisconsin with his in- (Continued on Page Seven) of the season now practically termi- nois squads of 1927. jured leg protected by a steel brace I_ _ __1111111111111__________________________ - - - - : I .1 r Now_ , Collegiate Clothes Shop The Best That Money Can Buy! 11 Fresh today and 'L, COPYRIGHT 1927 E UIPrEmU1EmIEi '1 I ({T;;