THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE T I 11 00 TWO ALLCAMPqUS ELEVENS .1 ! r * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * MICHIGAN DAILY ALL-CAMPUS FOOTBALL TEAMS * First team. Second team. * Joslyn, senior lit.. .......L..............Brown, junior lit *Giesslug, junior lit......... ..L.T............ .... Adams, medics * Patterson, senior eng..........L.G...........Weideman, fresh laws * Cudney, medics..............C...............Lambert, fresh laws * Novy, medics.................R..................Gray, fresh laws * Gillespie, fresh lit............R.T................Pence, junior lit O'Connor, fresh law......... .EE............Ingham, fresh law * Jolmson, fresh law....... ....Q..X...........Dondero, senior eng H Iamll, medics ...............L11....... .......Kane, fresh lit. * Northway, fresh law..........i..R.H ........ . .Adrianse, junior lit * hyde, medics...... ..........F. ..............Taylor, senior eng ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * The backfield is capable of fast end runs and possesses ability to plunge, punt, and drop kick. It should prove itself worthy in actual play.E Michiganders Answer Question-- i o We Want Varsity Basketball? * * * * * * * * * * * * I MEN CHOSEN FROM CLASS TEAMS FOR SQUADS BY DAILY JOHNSON PILOTS FIRST TEAM; O'CONNOR AND JOSLYN PLAY AT ENDS BOTH TEAMS ARE STRONG Hyde Plays Fullback; Giessing and Gillespie Are Tackles; Hamill and Northway at Half With the interclass football season practically at an end, choice of the annual all-campus team is in order, the selections coming from the many elevens who contested for the cham- pionship this fall. In many cases this has proved to be a most difficult piece of work, the material this year being of an unusually high caliber. For this reason two elevens have been selected by The Daily, the choice of the sec- ond team again being nearly as hard as. that of the first. In some cases nen have been changed from one side of the line to the other from which they have been playing during the ad- tive season. This is especially justi- fied in as much as the squads have constantly changed the positions of their players and the men are placed on the all-campus team where they are most effective. For the position of left end the de- cision had to be made between Joslyn and Brown, both of whom showed marked ability at that position during the season. The position is given to. Joslyn, who has had more experience and can handle himself well under all conditions of the game. The second position goes to Brown without a ques- tion. At the other end O'Connor is undoubtedly the best man who played in that capacity during the contests this fall. The second place is given to Ingham. Smith of the senior en- gineers put up a good fight in many hard contests and deserves honorable mention. At the inside line positions there is no one more worthy of a place than Cudney at center. Lambet has proved himself to be an excellent substitute. Giessing at tackle goes unchallenged and with Gillespie on the other side of the line and Patterson and Novy at the guards the team should present a stub- born front. The backfield seems the object of most diversity of opinion. Johnson and Dondero, both valuable men at the pilot position, have shown up well. Johnson is given the advantage be- cause of more experience. Dondero has played a hard, consistant game and received second choice with no dis- pute. Hamill, the fast halfback of the medics, would be a good man on any team and Northway, the fighting plunger of the fresh laws, presents a good running mate. Adrianse and Kane on the second lineup also de- serve more than the ordinary amount of credit. The latter has been the most valuable backfield man on his team all year and in spite of diminu- tive size has given more trouble to his opponents than many of more standard football size. Kohr and Rye also de- serve mention for work done in the capacity of halfbacks. The position of fullback is given to Hyde, of the medics, who has plunged and tackled successfully and consist- ently in every game. Taylor of the senior engineers has also bucked many a line for consistent gains and to him the second fullback job is presented. This all-campus team picked by The' Daily, has a line composed of men who have starred on the offense and have shown that they can stop an attack. C. C.C. FINISHES wa ! Shows Great Team Work, Taking Two Clean Victories in State 1WEFE AT COMES FROM SfRACUSE Thanksgiving day completed the 1916 cross country season. The team's record during the past fall has been a creditable one, with two clean cut victories chalked up to the credit of the Michigan hill and dale squad, to- wit: First place in the state meet at Lansing and first place at Belle Isle. Only one defeat marred the sea- son and that coming in the first part of the year was subsequently wiped out by later wins. The showing in the intercollegiate race at New Haven wa's an improvement over last year's rec- ord in that classic. Taken all around., the season has been a much better one than the last. With several men gone from the team the prospects for a successful season appeared rather dark at the outset, but hard work and plenty of fight more than off-set that handicap. Much of the team's record is due to the great work of Eddie Carroll, who took three firsts and one second in four meets during the fall. The team as a whole worked better than last year, demonstrating their superiority over the 1915 team when they took seven places out of the first 11 chances in the Detroit race Thurs- day. When Syracuse rolled across the final white mark en masse several weeks ago, things looked extremely gloomy, but since then the Wolverines have redeemed themselves. Fox and Sedgwick proved to be point winners for the Varsity and came in behind Carroll, respectively, in two meets. Captain Kuivenen ran consistently throughout the whole sea- son and added his quota to the grand total. Bachtel, Bouma, and Fuess all contributed. These seven men formed a well balanced team. In the first meet the' Wolverines scored 35 points while the Orangemen oaptured the lower total of 20, winning (Continued on Page Six) THREE DAYS UNTIL MI CHIGANENSIAN SUBSCRIPITION CAMPAIGN. SAVE 50 CENTS In the following interviews on the for a cracker-jack question of Varsity basketball at Mich- been made up of the igan, the majority of the opinions are igague last winter.' is that of competitit In favor of the plan. The Daily in- a fine one for deg tends to print more statements of especially football form similar to those already gathered. strong for it. Prof. F. H. Stevens of the engineer- N. F. Dunne, '17 ing college-It's a goad thing. If foot- football and baseball ball1 players would play basketball, rmuch in favor of they would make better football play- ought to have it of ers. The court game teaches the men ought t baet how to handle the ball, both in catch- the two-sport men w ing and passing. The only question i IH L. Carroll, '17E, captain of the should have as go Varsity track team-I am in favor of basketball as we ha basketball as a Varsity sport but not looks as; though at the present time. We should not would have to come branch out into new lines of sport though basketball is until our present forms of athletics western schools. are in a more settled condition. This E. F. Walsh, '17, applies especially to track. It would of the Michiganensi do more good at the present time to in favor of a Varsit spend more money on track trips in- I have often wonde stead of starting a new sport. An- many others have, j other thing, basketball might inter- not had a team, bu fere with the Varsity sports we al- tion that I have bee ready have. The average man cannot has been that the g handle more than one or two sports commodate the spect with benefit to himself, as that difficulty has Coach Stephen J. Farrell of the I can see no valid Varsity track team-I cannot see how should not have at Varsity basketball could harm track. have no trouble in, It would be impossible for men to tion. M. A. C. alway compete in both, and it would simply team. Many of the s mean that they would have to choose Michigan and Ohio h between the two sports. This would utations in basketba have very little effect on track, how- ever, as the combination of track ath- Unitarians Hold Th lete and basketball player is very sel- Ta ks I II dom found. I think that Varsity bas- A Thanksgiving pa ketball might be a success. t teld by the Unltarian Ralph A. McGinnis, '17L, coach of lastnight in the guil the All-Fresh football and baseball ments were served. teams-If the establishment of a team is practicable at the present time, I THREE DAY am certainly in favor of it. Varsity, ICHIGANENSIAN basketball is a big thing in most col- CAMPAIGN. SAN leges. It's a good winter sport, and; it would fill the hole between footballI Our alarm clocks and baseball in great shape. There Chapman, jeweler, surely would be no lack of material, street. team could have stars of the class The only question on. The game is veloping athletes, players. I am ?, of the Varsity teams-I am very basketball. We a a Varsity sport. ball, we could get we are losing now. s competition. We od competition in .ve in football. It this competition from the east, al- very strong in the managing editor an-I am heartily y basketball team. ered, as no doubt Just why we have ut the only objec- en able to unearth ym would not ac- tators. In as much now been removed reason why we team. We should securing competi- ys turns out a fine smallr colleges of have excellent -rep- 11. hanksgiving Party rty and dance was n Students' society ild hall. Refresh- YS UNTIL PAST FOOTBALL SEASON BRINGS MANYUPSETS nrmy, Pitt, and Colgate Are Best in East, With 3fIchigan, Notre Dame and Ohio in West. Another football season has died, and the burying process must now be u sh ered in. Football burying consists in two things--picking all-Americans and naming leading teams for various sections of these United States. Each of these two formulas mean3 not only a mass of turbulent figures for aspiring typewriter handlers, but leaves room for argument as to why this team wasn't better than that, and that this player played rings around every opposing gridder, that he was a whale on offense and defense, and that the person named missed an easy tackle in the Siwash game. Far from doubt, and more distantly away from fear of conterdiction this is submitted. Colgate Makes Strong Bid. To Colgate goes the honor of neatly disposing of two formidable claimants of the eastern title, and then being herself somewhat out of the running. When the Soapmakers applied the vacuum cleaner to Yale early in the season, the Blue wasn't considered with any more weight than it had been for the past several seasons. But later developments changed the complexion of things considerably for Princeton and Harvard fell before Captain Black's men in successive Saturdays. Colgate gave the Army and Pitts- burg something to be most thankful for by slapping a nice 28-0 coat of veneer over Brown on turkey day, leaving the generals and Warner's men the only two contenders for the SUBSCRIPTION eastern title. VE 50 CENTS (Continued on Page Six) are good clocks. THREE, DAYS UNTIL 113 South Main HICHIGANENSIAN SUBSCRII' tues-eod CAMPAIGN. 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